Yes. The standard is that it can't be a lie that would entice an innocent person to confess, if that makes sense.
I prefer not to lie to suspects, because makes things "cleaner", if you will. I do, on occasion, infer something is true when it isn't. For example, I'm known to say, "I know what really happened. Do you have any idea how many video cameras are out there in this world?" The inference of course is that I've got the suspect on camera doing the crime. An innocent person, hearing that there could be a video camera, would be relived to know that the offense is on camera, and would help prove their innocence. A guilty person, not so much.
A lie that might make an innocent person confess might be something like, "If you tell me you did it, you will get in less trouble than if you tell me you didn't."