
The Tell Me Lies season 3 episode 6 release date is Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026, and the practical detail most people actually need is the Hulu drop time: it typically hits at 12:00 a.m. ET, which is 9:00 p.m. PT the night before. That timing is exactly why your group chat is arguing about what day it “really” comes out.
To make things messier, at least one big watch guide lists Episode 6 a full week later (Feb. 10). If you’re trying to plan a watch party, avoid spoilers, or just not stay up late refreshing Hulu for no reason, here’s the cleanest way to think about it.
Tell Me Lies Season 3 Episode 6 release date and time (Hulu plus Disney+)
For Hulu viewers in the U.S., the consensus schedule pegs Episode 6 to Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2026. People lists “Feb. 3: Episode 6,” and that lines up with other outlet schedules.
Now the part that trips people up: the episode is expected to drop at 12:00 a.m. ET. Decider spells out the typical timing as “Tuesday, Feb. 3 at 12:00 a.m. ET / Monday, Feb. 2 at 9:00 p.m. PT.” That “Monday night” effect is real if you’re on the West Coast.
- East Coast (ET): available just after midnight, early Tuesday morning.
- Central (CT): 11:00 p.m. Monday.
- Mountain (MT): 10:00 p.m. Monday.
- Pacific (PT): 9:00 p.m. Monday.
What about Disney+? Hulu’s own language matters here because it frames how the season is being distributed. Hulu confirms in its official guide that Season 3 “premieres January 13, 2026, exclusively on Hulu and Disney+.” That tells you Disney+ is part of the plan, but it doesn’t give a clean, region-by-region time for Episode 6 the way Hulu’s midnight ET pattern tends to.
If you watch via Disney+, the most reliable move is boring but effective: check the episode tile in your local Disney+ app on Feb. 3 and use the in-app “available” time as the final word for your region.
Why some sites list a different date (Feb. 10)
If you’ve seen Feb. 10 floating around for Episode 6, you’re not imagining it. TechRadar’s watch page lists Episode 6 as Feb. 10, 2026, which conflicts with the Feb. 3 date carried by multiple other schedules.
Usually, “wrong date” drama comes from one of two problems:
- Timezone confusion: a midnight ET drop shows up as the previous day in PT, and people start repeating different dates. That explains a one-day disagreement, not a full week.
- Schedule-page drift: watch guides get updated, copied, reformatted, or cached. Sometimes a single typo turns into “truth” because other pages paraphrase it.
This particular conflict looks like the second issue, because it’s a whole-week slip, not a time-zone flip. When dates disagree by that much, your best credibility checklist is: official platform language first, then multiple independent outlets that match each other, then everything else.
Season 3 rollout context (so the schedule makes sense)
The larger rollout pattern supports Feb. 3 as Episode 6, too. Hulu anchors Season 3 as a weekly-style drop that started on Jan. 13, 2026, and it’s positioned as a Hulu and Disney+ exclusive. With that cadence, a Feb. 3 Episode 6 fits cleanly. A Feb. 10 Episode 6 implies either a break or a shifted counting scheme, and there’s no matching “official” signal in the publicly referenced guide language to suggest that.
Why should you care? Because this is how spoilers happen. If you think Episode 6 is “next week” but it actually drops Monday night in PT, the internet will happily ruin it for you by Tuesday morning.
What to do on release night
If you’re planning to watch as soon as it’s live, aim for 12:00 a.m. ET on Feb. 3 (or 9:00 p.m. PT on Feb. 2). If it’s not showing up exactly on the dot, give it a few minutes, refresh, and check the show page directly inside Hulu or Disney+ rather than relying on a third-party schedule.
The bigger takeaway is simple: watch guides are useful, not authoritative. When one page says Feb. 10 and three others say Feb. 3, trust the date that matches the platform’s rollout context and the schedules that agree with each other, then verify in-app when the clock hits release time.

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