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Is Hulu Down?

How to find out if Hulu is experiencing an outage

We’ve all experienced the dreaded buffering wheel of doom on our favorite streaming services. No service is perfect, and they all experience hiccups, and Hulu is no exception—you’re bound to experience one of these outages sooner or later. But how do you know if Hulu is down or if you’ve run into an issue with your internet connection? I’m going to help you answer that question in full now.

Check for a Hulu outage

Hulu does not maintain a dedicated status page, but there are still a few resources you can use to check for an outage. These include crowdsourced outage detection, third-party outage trackers, and social media posts by Hulu and its customers.

Check third-party outage trackers

If there’s a widespread outage, it’s likely to show up on an outage site. The only caveat is that the reliability isn’t as good as a dedicated in-house status page. Still, if you’re having issues with Hulu, these sites are a good place to start.

Status Gator Hulu Page: Status Gator uses a wide variety of data points to suggest an outage. It has a dedicated Hulu status page.

Downdetector Hulu Page: Downdetector’s Hulu page can tell you how many people have used Downdetector to report a Hulu outage in the last 24 hours. This is helpful, but also prone to false positives and negatives. Pay close attention to the actual numbers represented by Downdetector’s charts. A service as big as Hulu will always have some reported issues. Don’t get me wrong! Downdetector is a useful tool, but read its data with a grain of salt.

Check social media

Hulu may announce service outages on social media platforms, like X. It’s a good idea to check for official communications to verify any findings from the outage sites above. You can also check the Hulu subreddit to see if other community members are having similar issues.

When will Hulu be back online?

Your best bet to get any kind of ETA on a Hulu outage is to regularly check the Hulu social accounts.

Check your internet connection

It’s possible your internet connection is the issue. Hulu could be perfectly fine, but loading very slowly or not at all due to an issue with your internet connection, like a provider slowdown or even an outage.

Your best first step is to run a quick speed test. A speed test provides you with a bunch of useful info (like download speed and ping) along with verification that your connection is indeed working.

If you don’t get results at all, you’re either experiencing an internet outage or there’s something wrong with your home network. If you get results but they’re slower than what you’re paying for, check out our tips to improve your connection.

Is your internet provider the problem?

Run our speed test to check if your connection is keeping up with your online tasks.

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Latency (ping)
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Upgrade your internet plan

Video streaming like Hulu gets more demanding as film resolutions get better and better—you need more bandwidth for all that detail. Not too long ago, a 100–200Mbps plan was plenty of bandwidth for the average household, but today, the same residence might experience a serious bottleneck with the same speed.

Thankfully, it’s easy to find a better deal on internet service, and customers have more options than ever with new technologies, like 5G home internet. Plug your zip code into the search below and see if there’s a better internet plan in your future.

Looking for a smoother connection?

Enter your zip below to find faster internet service in your area.

Author -

Austin worked as a broadband technician installing and troubleshooting countless home internet networks for some of the largest ISPs in the U.S. He became a freelance writer in 2020 specializing in software guides. After graduating with a BS in technical communication from Arizona State University, he joined the team at HighSpeedInternet.com where he focuses on home network improvement and troubleshooting.

Editor - Jessica Brooksby

Jessica loves bringing her passion for the written word and her love of tech into one space at HighSpeedInternet.com. She works with the team’s writers to revise strong, user-focused content so every reader can find the tech that works for them. Jessica has a bachelor’s degree in English from Utah Valley University and seven years of creative and editorial experience. Outside of work, she spends her time gaming, reading, painting, and buying an excessive amount of Legend of Zelda merchandise.

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