Get ready for more drama, secrets, and heart-wrenching moments as ‘Tell Me Lies’ Season 3 finally has a release date, and it’s coming sooner than you think! Hulu’s addictive series will drop its first two episodes on January 13, 2026, available on both Hulu and Disney+ in the U.S., with an international premiere on Disney+. But here’s where it gets juicy: Lucy Albright (Grace Van Patten) and Stephen DeMarco (Jackson White) are back at it again, reigniting their tumultuous romance just in time for the spring semester at Baird College. Will they break the cycle, or are they doomed to repeat their mistakes? And this is the part most people miss—while Lucy and Stephen promise a fresh start, their past indiscretions threaten to derail everything, pulling Lucy into a controversy she never saw coming. Meanwhile, their friends are forced to confront their own destructive habits, thanks to the fallout from last season’s explosive events. Remember that jaw-dropping Season 2 finale? Bree (Catherine Missal) and Evan (Branden Cook) were moments away from saying ‘I do’ when Stephen dropped a bombshell: a recorded confession of Evan’s affair with Lucy. Ouch. Returning favorites like Sonia Mena, Spencer House, and Alicia Crowder are back, but the spotlight is also on new additions that could shake things up. As reported earlier, Iris Apatow joins as Amanda, a seemingly bubbly freshman with a dark secret, while Costa D’Angelo plays Alex, a psychology grad student and part-time drug dealer with a tangled history with Bree. Could these characters be the catalysts for even more chaos? Behind the scenes, Meaghan Oppenheimer leads as showrunner, with Emma Roberts and Karah Preiss executive producing under their Belletrist banner. Based on Carola Lovering’s novel, the series continues to blur the lines between love and manipulation, leaving us all questioning: Can trust ever truly be rebuilt? Scroll down for a sneak peek at the first-look photos, including a cryptic image of a partially eaten wedding cake—a not-so-subtle hint at the turmoil ahead. But here’s the real question: Are Lucy and Stephen’s toxic patterns a reflection of deeper issues in their friend group, or is this just another round of self-sabotage? Share your thoughts in the comments—let’s debate!