Disney to integrate Hulu and Disney+ in 2026
Walt Disney Co. is on track to fully integrate its streaming platforms Hulu and Disney+ in 2026.
Hulu isnβt disappearing; Disney hasnβt set a date to retire the stand-alone app. But the Burbank entertainment giant is making progress on its plan to fold Hulu content into the Disney+ platform sometime next year.
The Burbank entertainment giant announced last summer that it was merging Hulu programming onto Disney+. Executives declined Tuesday to provide a timetable for the launch of the integrated platform.
βWe are building on Disneyβs value proposition in streaming by combining Hulu into Disney+ to create a unified app experience featuring branded and general entertainment, news, and sports, resulting in a one-of-a-kind entertainment destination for subscribers,β Disney Chief Executive Bob Iger told Wall Street analysts during an August earnings call.
Disney acquired the controlling stake of Hulu as part of its $72-billion purchase in 2019 of much of Rupert Murdochβs Fox assets. But the full integration of Hulu was paused until earlier this year, when Disney finalized its purchase of Comcastβs one-third stake in the service after a testy dispute between the two rivals.
Until 2019, Hulu was owned by Comcastβs NBCUniversal, Disney and Fox.
Earlier this month, Disney engineers refreshed the Disney+ homepage to allow users to seamlessly move among its various catalogs β Disney+, Hulu and ESPN.
Disney has said Hulu will live on as the global brand for general entertainment, with such shows as βOnly Murders in the Building,β βParadiseβ and βThe Secret Lives of Mormon Wives.β
As part of the Mouse Houseβs choreographed months-long rollout, the company switched the Star tile for international Disney+ customers in October. Now, the green Hulu logo appears for those users. (Star, a popular television service in India, was also among the Fox assets that Disney acquired nearly seven years ago.)
Disney separately operates Hulu + Live TV, a pay-TV service with popular broadcast and cable channels, including ABC, CBS, CNN, Fox and ESPN. Eventually, that service will be folded into the Disney+ app.
Hulu subscribers will continue to be able to access the app well into next year.
After the launch of the combined platform, Hulu subscribers will be able to watch Hulu-branded shows, but Disney is designing the experience to entice users to upgrade to a Disney bundle. The companyβs goal is for fewer subscribers to drop their plans and, instead, spend more time on the Disney+ app.
As the year draws to a close, Disney is celebrating a successful year at the box office. It released two movies that surpassed $1 billion in global ticket sales: βZootopia 2,β and βLilo & Stitch.β The James Cameron movie βAvatar: Fire and Ash,β which debuted this month, so far has made more than $750 million worldwide.
The companyβs TV programmers are under pressure to boost their slate of original television and streaming shows.
Disney mustered just three entries in Nielsenβs Streaming Top 10 for the last week of November, according to the rating agencyβs most recent report.
All were acquired shows, including βHomeland,β a decade-old Showtime production that runs on both Hulu and Netflix. βHomeland,β starring Claire Danes and Mandy Patinkin, was ranked fifth for that week, lagging well behind Netflixβs βStranger Things,β which broke records. Paramount+βs βLandman,β from Taylor Sheridan, was the second-most popular streaming show.
βBobβs Burgers,β a show created for Fox and available on Hulu, ranked seventh. βBluey,β an Australian cartoon distributed by Disney+ was the eighth most popular streaming show.
Disney programmers are preparing reboots of nostalgic 20th Television-produced shows, including βMalcolm in the Middleβ and βScrubs.β