Health Advertising Policies on Social Media in 2026: What Meta, TikTok, and Others Prohibit

Digital marketing for health and wellness brands becomes more challenging every year. Due to important patient privacy laws, these brands are unable to deploy many of the tools available to digital advertisers in other industries. To protect user safety and to mitigate their own legal liability, the paid social advertising platforms themselves also enforce specific policies for how health advertisers may use their services. 

These policies are tweaked and updated frequently. Leading into 2026, several social platforms materially tightened enforcement of existing health advertising rules. While policy language did not always change, how those rules are applied—particularly around tracking, optimization, and audience use—did.

For instance:

  • Meta escalated enforcement of health-related conversion tracking restrictions, limiting the use of lower-funnel optimization events for many healthcare advertisers.
  • LinkedIn updated its health advertising policy language to further restrict ads that imply or rely on sensitive health information, including certain audience targeting practices.

Changes like these continually force health advertisers to audit their own practices and find new ways to reach potential patients. Failure to follow these policies can have consequences. Brands can have their ads limited or disapproved, or even have their accounts locked, if they flaunt the policies meant to keep these social platforms safe and non-invasive for users.  

To make things simpler, ADM has assembled this guide to the noteworthy healthcare advertising policies across the leading social platforms. Recognize that these platform policies and are separate from, and not based on, the federal policies regarding PHI that deny the use of tracking pixels in most health applications.

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Meta Ads Health Policies

Meta is the juggernaut of social media advertising. Meta Ads allows you to place across Instagram and Facebook—each with more than 2 billion monthly users—as well as other Meta properties like WhatsApp and Messenger. As the most pre-eminent social ad platform, it has extensive and evolving policies related to health, wellness, and pharmaceutical marketing. Its rules cover what brands are allowed to claim and say in their ads as well as what technologies they are allowed to deploy.

New for 2026: Building on Enhanced Categorization Policies

In early 2025, Meta made waves with new limitations on how health and wellness brands use their advertising tools. All brands whose offerings are “associated with medical conditions, specific health statuses, or provider/patient relationships,” (so, all healthcare brands) became subject to categorization and restriction based on the functions they are attempting to link to their Meta advertising.

Health and wellness brands are now assessed either a partial or full restriction on their ability to optimize campaigns based off of certain lower-funnel conversion events, like sales or appointment bookings. Partial restrictions apply to most health and wellness brands, while full restriction is primarily assessed to entities linking to sensitive web properties like patient portals.

Leading up to 2026, Meta stepped up enforcement and expanded on these policies by taking aim at custom and lookalike audiences, as well as custom conversions. This included flagging and disabling custom or lookalike audiences and custom conversions whose names, rules, or metadata included or implied sensitive traits (e.g., “arthritis_interest_list” or “appointment booked” conversions).

In light of these changes, brands are advised to review their audience and conversion naming conventions and request reviews if they believe their account elements have been improperly flagged and disabled.

Meta Ad Content Policies

Because of the sheer scope of its advertising suite, Meta has some of the most detailed health marketing content policies in the industry. As of 2025, policies restricting Facebook and Instagram health marketing include:

Personal Health and Appearance

Once called the Personal Health and Appearance policy, this Meta rule has been rolled into its larger Health and Wellness advertising guidelines. The rules state that advertisers must not run ads that generate “negative self-perception” as a means to promote health, wellness, or cosmetic products and procedures.

Cosmetic Procedures and Wellness Policy

Meta’s Cosmetic Procedures and Wellness rule dictates that advertisers not target users under the age of 18 with advertising related to:

  • Weight loss products and services
  • Cosmetic surgeries and procedures
  • Dietary, health or herbal supplements

Online Pharmacies Policy

The Online Pharmacies rule is meant to ensure and pharmaceutical advertising on Facebook and Instagram is being done by reputable and verified pharmacies. All pharmaceutical advertisers might be LegitScript certified in order to tun their ads.

Personal Attributes Policy

Meta’s Personal Attributes Policy forbids brands from using their ads to assert or imply knowledge of a user’s personal attributes (including medical conditions). It largely discourages second-person language in ad copy (“Meet singles like you”; “Conquer your depression,” etc.) except in certain cases.

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TikTok Health Advertising Rules

Despite its wavering legal status, TikTok quickly became a social phenomenon, combining short form video with a rapidfire viewing experience and an impressively predictive algorithm. It’s also an increasingly-potent advertising option, even for health brands. In recent years, TikTok quickly built out restrictions and policies governing health advertising on its platform, though many lack the specificity outlined by other social platforms.

TikTok’s policies are country-specific. In the United States, all advertising related to any of the following must be targeted at users age 18 or older.

Prescription Advertising and Pharmacies

TikTok states that ads for prescription medicine may be allowed if advertisers provide “proof of approval and certification from appropriate local regional regulating authorities” (like the FDA).

Both brick-and-mortar and online pharmacies are allowed to advertise with proof of LegitScript or NABP certification.

Cosmetic Clinics and Surgeries

Where there are influencers there are cosmetic ads, so this is a particular area of focus for TikTok.

  • Cosmetic clinics may advertise on TikTok provided they are locally certified and comply with all their local laws and regulations. TikTok mentions services like fillers and microdermabrasion services as allowable.
  • Cosmetic surgeries may not be advertised on TikTok, with the exception of hair transplants.

Medical devices, OTC Medications, and Medical Institutions

Medical devices and over-the-counter (OTC) medications are fine to advertise on TIkTok provided that the products comply with all local laws and regulations and have FDA approval where necessary. Medical institutions can advertise if they are in compliance with all local laws and regulations.

Sexual Health Products

This is the one TikTok policy that invokes specific content restrictions. Products like condoms and lubricant may be advertised on TikTok, so long as they are not targeted at users under 18 and that ad content is not “overtly sexual” and does not “focus on sexual pleasure.”

Like Meta, TikTok explicitly asks brands not to use its tracking technology to collect healthcare information. 

X’s Health and Pharmaceutical Policies

The platform once called Twitter has experienced some advertiser flight, but it’s still a major player in social media marketing. Now called X, it has a large healthcare policy section that covers restrictions unique to different countries around the world. Its primary policy is actually a list of exceptions: “Unless listed below, the promotion of health and pharmaceutical products and services is prohibited,” X’s site states. 

Exceptions to X’s Health Advertising Bans

Exceptions include:

  • Telemedicine advertising, provided the brand only advertisers in states it can operate and seeks prior authorization form X
  • Advertisements for brick-and-mortar pharmacies provided they don’t promote the online sale of pharmaceuticals
  • Advertisements for FDA-approved medical devices
  • Advertisements from NABP-accredited online pharmacies

To view the full list of restrictions and exceptions, view X’s Healthcare policy page. The company also prohibits the creation of custom audiences or conversion events based off of sensitive information, including health information.

LinkedIn’s Healthcare Advertising Policy 

LinkedIn Ads is a highly-underrated marketing tool for brands in many industries—and is particularly useful for B2B advertising. But after being named in class action suits for allegedly enabling improper PHI sharing, LinkedIn has begun to add some additional restrictions. Currently, it “reserves the right to restrict advertising related to any health matter.

LinkedIn’s stated health ad policies include:

New for 2026: Insight Tags Disabled for Health Domains

As a result of the aforementioned class action suits, in 2025 LinkedIn began to block usage of its Insight Tag (not unlike a Meta Pixel) on healthcare-related domains, or any others that may transmit what it classifies as Sensitive Data. Conversion tracking stops once the tag is disabled, and website retargeting audiences shrink as cookie pools disappear.

LinkedIn recommends using its Conversions API (server-to-server tracking), engagement-based retargeting (e.g., video views or ad clicks), or matched audiences built from first-party CRM data. B2B health brands can continue targeting professionals, but consumer campaigns must shift to alternative measurement strategies.

Healthcare Ads Policy

LinkedIn has a fairly comprehensive and consolidated Healthcare Ads Policy that outlines rules for what health products and services can be marketed on the platform, and under what conditions. Unlike other platforms, LinkedIn does have specific policies that relate to healthcare policy awareness advertising and clinical trial recruitment.

Health and Weight Loss Content Policy

LinkedIn also outlines specific content guidelines for health and weight loss ads, which discourage ads that promote misleading health info, “idealize or criticize” someone’s physical attributes, nor “promote or reinforce” negativity around body image or health conditions.

Pinterest’s Health and Wellness Advertising Restrictions

Pinterest is an intriguing, cost-effective, and highly-visual social platform with a devoted user base that appeals to many health and lifestyle brands. It also has some of the most straightforward, unique, and restrictive health advertising policies of all. For healthcare and wellness ads on Pinterest, brands may not:

  • Target audiences based on sensitive health or medical conditions
  • Advertise many health services, including clinical trials, direct-to-consumer genetic tests, paternity tests, and more

Weight Loss Advertising Ban

While other social platforms attempt to mitigate negative feelings created by weight loss-related advertising, Pinterest takes a novel approach: It completely rejects any ads on the subject. Since 2021, the platform has banned all weight loss imagery and language entirely from its advertising.   

With prior platform approval, and subject to certain restrictions, Pinterest does allow marketing from online pharmacies, pharmaceutical manufacturers, and telehealth providers.

Staying Compliant in Healthcare Social Marketing

It’s vital to ensure you’re up-to-date on the health advertising policies on every social platform in your brand’s digital marketing portfolio if you want to keep your account in good standing. The last thing you want are negligent ad disapprovals that slow down your growth marketing strategy. And even more importantly, stay in tune with the latest in health advertising news, because worse still than a locked ads account would be a seven-figure fine. 

For help navigating the ins and outs of health digital marketing, it may be wise to partner with an agency that specializes in healthcare. Reach out to the ADM team today if you’re looking for compliant marketing success. 

DISCLAIMER

This content is for informational use only and is based on analysis of current platform policies related to health advertising. These policies are subject to change following this publication date. If you require legal advice about any of the matters discussed above, ADM recommends seeking a healthcare privacy attorney.

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