Google Ads for Healthcare Australia: Navigating Healthcare Ad Policies
Running Google Ads for a healthcare business feels like walking through a minefield.
One wrong claim in your ad copy, and Google suspends your account. One compliance slip, and the TGA (Therapeutic Goods Administration) investigates. You’re not just competing on keywords—you’re competing while following rules most other industries don’t have.
The truth? Healthcare advertising is actually very doable if you understand the rules. Google Ads for healthcare practices, clinics, allied health, telehealth, and wellness businesses can generate exceptional ROI. You just need to know what you can and can’t say.
In this guide, we’ll walk through Google’s healthcare policies, TGA regulations that apply to your ads, compliant keyword strategy, and how to position your practice competitively.
The Regulatory Landscape: What You Need to Know
Healthcare advertising in Australia is governed by three things:
- Google Ads policies (stricter than other industries)
- TGA (Therapeutic Goods Administration) regulations (Australian government)
- ACCC (Australian Consumer Law) (consumer protection)
Google’s Healthcare Policy
Google has stricter review processes for healthcare, pharmaceutical, and medical device ads. Key rules:
What you CAN say:
- “Book an appointment with our GP”
- “Depression counselling — speak to a therapist”
- “COVID-19 vaccination clinic — appointments available”
- “Pain relief services — evidence-based treatments”
What you CANNOT say:
- “Cure diabetes” or “cure cancer” (no cures for serious conditions)
- “Our treatment is better than [competitor]” (unsubstantiated claims)
- “FDA/TGA approved” unless explicitly true (easy mistake)
- Health claims for services outside your scope
- Exaggerated testimonials
Restricted keywords:
- Pharmaceuticals (if you’re not licensed to sell them)
- Controlled substances
- Unapproved medical devices
TGA Regulations
The TGA oversees therapeutic goods in Australia. If your ads mention treating, preventing, or diagnosing a health condition, the TGA has jurisdiction.
Key TGA rules for ad copy:
- No false or misleading claims — Can’t claim a treatment works if evidence doesn’t support it
- Scope of practice — Can’t advertise outside your qualifications (physio can’t advertise as a doctor)
- Therapeutic claims must be substantiated — If you claim your product/service treats or prevents something, you need evidence
Example issue:
- You claim: “Our supplement cures arthritis”
- TGA says: Where’s your evidence? Likely to issue a compliance notice.
- Fix: “Natural ingredient studies show potential anti-inflammatory benefits. Consult your doctor.”
ACCC (Australian Consumer Law)
Governs misleading or deceptive conduct. Relevant rules:
- No exaggerated claims (“99% of patients cured” when data doesn’t support it)
- No misrepresentation of qualifications or certifications
- Testimonials must be genuine and representative
Google Ads Pre-Approval for Healthcare
Google reviews healthcare ads more carefully before they go live.
The Pre-Approval Process
- When you create a healthcare ad, Google flags it for review
- Google’s team reviews it against their medical policies
- Approval usually takes 24–48 hours (longer than regular ads)
- If it violates policies, Google tells you specifically what’s wrong
How to Avoid Rejection
Before submitting, ask:
- Am I making a health claim? (If yes, is it substantiated?)
- Does my ad imply a cure or diagnosis? (If yes, remove it.)
- Is my ad position statement true? (If unsure, don’t claim it.)
- Would a healthcare regulator be OK with this? (If no, rewrite.)
Common rejections and fixes:
| Rejected Copy | Reason | Fixed Copy |
|---|---|---|
| “Cure your anxiety with our therapy” | “Cure” is disallowed for mental health | “Evidence-based therapy for anxiety management” |
| “Better than competitor X” | Unsubstantiated comparative claim | “Personalised treatment plans for your needs” |
| “TGA-approved supplement” | Not verified | “Made with researched ingredients” |
| “Doctor-recommended weight loss” | Unsubstantiated, implies medical claim | “Weight management support with professional guidance” |
Healthcare CPCs and Keyword Economics
Healthcare keywords are expensive. This is important to know before you launch.
Keyword Cost Comparison
| Speciality | Avg CPC | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Family GP / General Practice | $5–$15 | High volume, competitive |
| Psychology / Mental Health | $8–$25 | High-value patients, competitive |
| Dental | $4–$12 | Geotargeting reduces competition |
| Physiotherapy | $3–$8 | Local-based, moderate competition |
| Private Specialist (Surgery, Cardiology) | $20–$60 | High patient lifetime value |
| Telehealth | $6–$20 | Growing, increasing competition |
| Aesthetics / Cosmetic Surgery | $15–$40 | High revenue per patient |
| Addiction Treatment | $30–$80 | High-value patients, compliance issues |
Patient Lifetime Value (Why CPCs Are High)
Healthcare has high patient LTV (lifetime value), which justifies higher CPCs:
Example: Family GP
- Patient acquisition cost: $50 (from Google Ads)
- Lifetime patient value: $5,000+ (regular visits over 5+ years)
- LTV : CAC ratio: 100:1
Even a $50 CPC is profitable because the patient stays with you for years.
Example: Physiotherapy
- Patient acquisition cost: $40
- Lifetime patient value: $1,500 (multiple visits)
- LTV : CAC ratio: 37:1
Healthcare Keywords: What Works
High-Intent Keywords (Bid Aggressively)
- “[Condition] + treatment + [suburb]” (e.g., “back pain treatment, Brisbane”)
- “[Speciality] + appointment [suburb]” (e.g., “dermatologist appointment, Sydney”)
- “[Speciality] + bulk billing” (high-intent, price-aware)
- “Urgent [speciality] care”
- “[Condition] + help” or “[condition] + specialist”
Expected conversion rate: 3–8% (people actively seeking treatment)
Mid-Intent Keywords (Bid Moderately)
- “[Condition] + symptoms”
- “[Speciality] + [suburb]”
- “Best [speciality] near me”
- “[Condition] + management”
Expected conversion rate: 1–3%
Low-Intent Keywords (Skip or Bid Low)
- “[Condition] + information” (research phase, not ready to book)
- “[Condition] + causes” (not ready for treatment)
- “How to [self-treat condition]” (they’re trying to avoid paying)
Expected conversion rate: <0.5%
Bulk Billing Keywords (If Applicable)
Australian patients search heavily for bulk billing:
- “Bulk billing GP [suburb]”
- “Bulk billing psychologist”
- “Bulk billing physiotherapist”
If you bulk bill, these keywords are gold. Bid aggressively.
Ad Copy: What You Can and Can’t Say
Strong Healthcare Ad Examples
Family GP:
- Headline: “Quality GP Care — [Suburb]”
- Description: “Same-day appointments available. Bulk billing accepted. Experienced GP team.”
- Landing: Appointment booking page
Psychologist:
- Headline: “Therapy for Anxiety & Depression”
- Description: “Evidence-based treatment. Medicare rebates available. Flexible appointments.”
- Landing: Service overview + booking
Physiotherapy:
- Headline: “Sport Injury Physio — [Suburb]”
- Description: “Fast recovery. One-on-one treatment. Allied health referrals accepted.”
- Landing: Conditions treated + booking
Words to AVOID in Healthcare Ads
- “Cure” (unless it’s proven and TGA-approved)
- “Miracle” or “miraculous”
- “Guaranteed” (unless legally true)
- “FDA-approved” or “TGA-approved” (unless verified)
- “Best” or “only” (unsubstantiated superlatives)
- “Works for everyone” (overgeneralisation)
Qualifier Words That Work
- “Evidence-based”
- “Research shows”
- “Clinically proven”
- “Experienced team”
- “Personalised treatment”
- “Compassionate care”
Landing Page Requirements for Healthcare
Healthcare landing pages must:
- Clearly identify the practice and practitioners
- Names, qualifications, registration numbers
- Professional photo (builds trust)
- Be specific about services
- Don’t promise what you don’t offer
- Be clear about scope of practice
- Include trust signals
- Credentials / registrations (AHPRA, medical board, etc.)
- Reviews (Google, independent sites)
- Affiliations (hospital, professional bodies)
- Have a clear CTA
- Appointment booking button (prominent)
- Phone number
- Contact form
- Not make unsupported claims
- Don’t claim treatment outcomes without evidence
- Don’t compare with competitors unless facts support it
Example poor landing page:
- Hero says “Cure depression” (unsupported)
- No practitioner details
- No testimonials or credentials
- No appointment booking
Example good landing page:
- Hero: “Depression treatment with Dr [Name] (RANZCP Registered)”
- Section: “Our approach” with evidence-based description
- Testimonials (verified reviews)
- Section: “Dr [Name]’s qualifications and experience”
- Prominent “Book appointment” button
Telehealth & COVID-19 Ads (Special Rules)
Telehealth Ads
Telehealth is booming in Australia post-COVID. Google allows telehealth ads but with clarity requirements:
What to include:
- Clearly state “online consultation” or “video appointment”
- Specify which states/territories you service (telehealth has regional boundaries)
- State that it’s not suitable for certain conditions (e.g., emergency situations)
COVID-19 Related Ads
Google has specific rules for COVID-19 ads:
- Must be accurate and from credible sources
- No misleading claims about vaccines or treatments
- Link to official government resources (ATAGI, Health.gov.au)
- If advertising vaccination, make it clear what you’re offering (clinic location, vaccine type, appointment availability)
Conversion Tracking for Healthcare
Healthcare conversions are tricky because the patient journey is long:
What to Track
- Appointment bookings (top priority)
- Contact form submissions
- Phone calls (use call tracking)
- View of specific pages (e.g., “intake form viewed” = high-intent signal)
Setting Up Healthcare Conversion Tracking
In Google Ads:
- Create conversion: “Appointment Booked”
- Create conversion: “Contact Form Submitted”
- Create conversion: “Phone Call” (if using call extensions)
In Google Analytics 4:
- Track form submissions as events
- Link back to Google Ads
Caution: Don’t track sensitive health info in GA4 (patient names, diagnoses, etc.). That violates privacy.
Audience Targeting for Healthcare
Geographic Targeting
Healthcare is hyperlocal. A GP in Brisbane won’t serve Sydney.
- Set location targeting to your service area only
- If you offer telehealth, expand to national but note it in ads
Demographic Targeting
Use demographic targeting thoughtfully:
- Age targeting: Appropriate for age-specific conditions (e.g., arthritis → older audiences, acne treatments → teens)
- Gender targeting: Use only if clinically relevant
- Parental status: Useful for pediatric services
Device & Platform Targeting
Healthcare users search on all devices:
- Mobile: High (quick searches, booking appointments)
- Desktop: High (researching conditions, reading reviews)
- Tablet: Lower
Don’t restrict to one device unless there’s a reason.
Common Mistakes Healthcare Businesses Make
1. Unsubstantiated Health Claims
“Our supplement cures cancer” — Will get rejected or trigger TGA investigation.
2. Not Mentioning Scope of Practice
Physiotherapist ads saying “Treat mental health” — Scope violation.
3. Poor Landing Pages
Ad sends to homepage instead of specific service page. Conversion rates tank.
4. No Appointment Booking
Ad says “Call for appointment” but website has no booking system. User friction.
5. Ignoring Mobile
Healthcare searchers are mobile-heavy (someone wants a quick appointment). Ads must work on mobile.
Healthcare PPC Checklist
- [ ] Google Ads healthcare policies reviewed and understood
- [ ] TGA regulations checked (if advertising therapeutic services/products)
- [ ] Ad copy reviewed: No unsupported claims, no “cure” language
- [ ] Landing pages have practitioner credentials and qualifications
- [ ] Reviews/testimonials displayed
- [ ] Appointment booking system integrated
- [ ] Conversion tracking set up (appointment bookings, form submissions, calls)
- [ ] Geographic targeting restricted to service areas
- [ ] Bulk billing mentioned (if applicable)
- [ ] Privacy compliance checked (not tracking sensitive health data)
- [ ] Pre-approval submitted to Google (allow 24–48 hours for review)
Summary
Healthcare Google Ads works if you:
- Know the rules (Google policies + TGA regulations)
- Make substantiated claims (evidence-based language)
- Be transparent (qualifications, scope of practice, specialities)
- Focus on access (appointments, bulk billing, locations)
- Track conversions properly (bookings, not just clicks)
Healthcare has higher CPCs and longer sales cycles, but patient LTV is exceptional. CPAs in the $20–$60 range are profitable because a single patient is worth thousands.
The key is compliance + clarity. Do those right, and healthcare Google Ads becomes a consistent patient acquisition channel.
Anitech manages compliant healthcare Google Ads campaigns for clinics, practices, and wellness businesses. We understand TGA regulations, Google healthcare policies, and healthcare user intent. We don’t just run campaigns—we make sure they’re compliant and sustainable. Book a healthcare PPC consultation and let’s discuss your practice’s growth.
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