What is the plot?

The sixth season of The Conners opens with the family still living in the aftermath of years of loss, financial strain, and shifting relationships, with Dan, Darlene, Becky, and Jackie each facing new pressures as they try to keep their lives stable in Lanford.

Early in the season, Dan's attention is pulled toward the opioid crisis that killed Roseanne, and the season builds toward his decision to take action against the pharmaceutical company he believes bears responsibility for her death.

Dan ultimately pursues that fight in court, driven by grief, anger, and the need for closure rather than the expectation of real financial victory.

As the season moves forward, Darlene continues managing her life with Ben, while Becky continues rebuilding her life after her past alcoholism, and Jackie keeps pushing her own family and work life forward.

By the end of the season, the story reaches its emotional peak in Dan's confrontation with the pharmaceutical company, where he does not receive the massive payout he hoped for, but he does achieve a sense of closure.

After that, the family gathers at Roseanne's grave: Dan, Darlene, Becky, and Jackie each arrive with their current spouses, all of whom came into their lives after Roseanne's fatal overdose, and they tell her that she can rest easy because life has turned out all right for them.

The final moments of the season are built around that graveside visit, which serves as the closing emotional beat of the season and the series' central farewell to Roseanne and to the family's long struggle with her absence.

What is the ending?

In the Season 6 ending of The Conners, the family begins splitting into separate lives. Harris moves toward getting her own apartment, Becky chooses to stay after Darlene offers her a place, and Mark keeps chasing money for college, even if it means taking risky work.

Here is the ending in a short, simple narrative form:

At the end, Darlene realizes the household is changing and agrees to help Harris start over on her own. Becky decides not to leave after all, because Tyler can move in and she can see whether the relationship is really working. Mark is still scrambling to pay for the University of Chicago, and his search pushes him into dangerous work that leaves his future uncertain.

Expanded scene-by-scene narration:

The ending opens with the family facing the fact that their lives are no longer staying bundled together under one roof. Becky and Harris tell Darlene that they are planning to move out, and Darlene reacts with clear separation anxiety, because she can already feel the family structure loosening around her.

Harris pushes forward with her plan to live independently. She wants a one-bedroom apartment, and Darlene eventually agrees to co-sign the lease so Harris can rent the place and begin her own life.

Becky's situation changes inside that same family shift. Darlene tells her that Tyler can move in, and that gives Becky a reason to stay where she is for the moment. She decides not to uproot herself yet, because she wants time to find out whether she and Tyler are actually compatible before making a bigger move.

Mark's ending runs on a separate track. He is trying to pay tuition for the University of Chicago, and he takes odd jobs to make the money. He first attempts work as a repo man, but that does not solve his problem. After that, he turns to an illegal hacking job, which is presented as a bad path and one that is expected to go badly for him later.

The final state of each main character at the end of Season 6 is this:

Darlene stays in the middle of the family's changing situation and agrees to support Harris by co-signing the lease.

Harris moves toward living on her own in a one-bedroom apartment.

Becky remains in Darlene's home for the time being, because Tyler can move in and she wants to test the relationship before making a larger commitment.

Mark is still trying to fund his education, and he ends the season heading into risky illegal work to do it.

Dan and Jackie are pulled into Mark's repo-man attempt, but that effort fails, and the finale leaves Mark's next move hanging over the story.

Is there a post-credit scene?

No, there is not a post-credit scene in The Conners season 6 finale. The ending instead uses the credits themselves as part of the farewell, with the final episode closing on an emotional goodbye rather than adding an extra scene after the credits roll.

The closest thing to a "post-credit" element is that the finale's credits include additional nostalgic Roseanne-era clips, which viewers noted as an unusual choice for the show's ending. The rest of the finale's emotional weight comes from the family's last on-screen goodbye, not from a separate tag scene after the credits.

What happens to Bev’s dementia in Season 6, and how does it affect her relationship with Jackie and Dan?

Bev's Season 6 storyline centers on the shock that her dementia has effectively been reversed by an experimental drug trial, which first appears in her early Season 6 scenes and becomes a major emotional pivot by episode 3, "Moms and Rats." Her regained memory lets her reconnect more clearly and warmly with Jackie and Dan, including a deeply moving moment where she tells Dan how much she cherished his support and how much Roseanne loved him. The story then sends her off on a new chapter of independent travel, after she makes amends with Jackie and Dan.

Does Bev really recover her memory in Season 6, or is it only temporary?

Season 6 presents Bev's improvement as real and meaningful rather than a brief tease: her nurses say her dementia has been effectively reversed by an experimental drug trial, and later episodes show her with much of her memory and independence restored. The season uses that recovery to give her a rare hopeful arc, culminating in her choosing to leave Chicago and spend her remaining years adventuring.

What is the significance of Bev’s Chicago day out with Jackie in Season 6?

The Chicago outing is one of the season's most emotionally important Bev scenes because it gives Jackie the affirmation she has long lacked. During the day together, Bev admits that she always loved, respected, and admired Jackie and wishes she had not been so hard on her, turning the trip into a long-delayed moment of validation and reconciliation between mother and daughter.

What does Bev say to Dan in Season 6, and why is that scene important?

In "Moms and Rats," Bev gives Dan an impassioned speech saying how much she cherished his support and how much Roseanne loved him. The scene matters because Dan has spent decades without expecting that kind of recognition from Bev, so his stunned reaction lands as one of the most emotionally powerful moments in the season.

How does Bev leave the story in Season 6, and what is she doing at the end of her arc?

By the end of her Season 6 arc, Bev chooses not to stay settled with the family and instead heads off by train to live out her final years traveling across America. The show frames this as an unexpectedly hopeful departure: she has repaired key relationships, regained much of herself, and leaves on her own terms.

Is this family friendly?

Season 6 of The Conners is not especially family-friendly for young children. It is rated TV-PG, but the show centers on adult problems like parenting, dating, money stress, and aging, so it is more suitable for teens and older viewers than for small kids.

Potentially objectionable or upsetting elements can include:

  • Adult conflict and frequent family arguments.
  • Financial stress and other real-world hardship themes.
  • Dating/relationship content and mature relationship issues.
  • Mildly intense or uncomfortable situations used for comedy, including a storyline involving a rat.
  • General emotional tension around family struggles and personal pressures.

If you want, I can also give a very short age recommendation like "safe for 10+, 13+, or 16+" based on the tone of the season.