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Streamlining the Mouse: Leaked Files Reveal Exactly When Disney Plans to Delete the Hulu App

Kid watching Disney+
Credit: Disney

For nearly two decades, the neon green Hulu icon has been a familiar anchor on smart TV home screens across the country. It was the trailblazing pioneer that proved streaming could handle next-day broadcast television, mature animation, and critically acclaimed powerhouse dramas like The Bear. But behind the scenes at the Mouse House, the countdown clock has officially run out.

Despite public corporate assurances that standalone access was safe, an explosive internal leak has unmasked Disney’s final play for the platform. According to a confidential document obtained by Business Insider and reported by 9to5Mac, Disney is executing a sweeping digital consolidation plan codenamed “Project Gemini.” The strategy marks a definitive end-of-an-era moment: the standalone Hulu app will be permanently deleted, fully absorbing its library into a singular platform.

Inside “Project Gemini”: The End of 2026 Timeline

Hulu’s long-term independence became a matter of corporate math once Disney assumed full ownership of the platform. The introduction of the “Hulu Hub” tile inside Disney+ was merely the testing ground for a much larger, structural corporate shift.

The leaked internal files lay out a clear, aggressive pipeline to import all remaining Hulu properties—including user profiles, watch histories, and deep metadata parameters—directly into the main Disney+ interface. According to internal engineering sources, this technical migration is expected to be completed by the end of 2026.

The leaked text explicitly lays out the execution order:

“The Hulu tech stack and app will be decommissioned after all users have transitioned.”

Starved for Code: Why Hulu is Already on “Life Support”

For consumers who still heavily rely on the independent Hulu app, the operational gear shift of Project Gemini is already making waves behind the scenes. The leak confirms that Disney has systematically cut off developmental resources and capital funding for the legacy green application.

Three separate high-ranking Disney tech employees revealed that engineers have been aggressively pulled off the Hulu product team and reallocated straight to the development of Disney+. The standalone Hulu app has essentially been frozen in place—meaning it will no longer receive user interface refreshes, functional layout updates, or major performance upgrades.

As one veteran streaming product employee working directly on the Hulu ecosystem bluntly stated, “Hulu is on life support at this point, with no active development.”

The corporate goal is to “get folks to migrate organically” by engineering artificial stagnation. By leaving the independent Hulu app completely static, it will inevitably become sluggish, clunky, and increasingly prone to glitches as modern smart TVs and mobile operating systems update their own software around it. Meanwhile, the Hulu tile inside Disney+ will consistently receive top-tier updates, eventually frustrating even the most stubborn Hulu traditionalists into making the jump.

Josh D’Amaro’s “Super App” Ambitions Realized

This aggressive tech consolidation represents the first massive, defining digital maneuver under new Disney CEO Josh D’Amaro. Known for his sharp focus on pairing consumer-facing technology with legacy brand equity, D’Amaro is driving a unified corporate focus to streamline Disney’s sprawling direct-to-consumer businesses.

By eliminating standalone technical redundancies, D’Amaro’s “Super App” blueprint strikes directly at the streaming industry’s greatest financial boogeyman: subscriber churn.

Internal corporate data has consistently shown that bundle subscribers who consume a wider variety of content within a single app environment are vastly less likely to hit the cancel button than those bouncing between separate apps. Furthermore, dissolving the Hulu app saves the company hundreds of millions of dollars annually by eliminating duplicate server maintenance costs, distinct customer service networks, and overlapping engineering salaries.

For solo subscribers who only pay for Hulu and have no desire to view standard Disney content, the leak notes they won’t necessarily be forced into an expensive bundle. Disney plans to continue offering independent, lower-tier Hulu options. However, once the green app goes dark, those users will be forced to log in to a restricted, locked-down version of the Disney+ app interface that limits their viewable grid to the Hulu tile.

About Rick Lye

Rick is an avid Disney fan. He first went to Disney World in 1986 with his parents and has been hooked ever since. Rick is married to another Disney fan and is in the process of turning his two children into fans as well. When he is not creating new Disney adventures, he loves to watch the New York Yankees and hang out with his dog, Buster. In the fall, you will catch him cheering for his beloved NY Giants.

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