As the leading U.S. peer-to-peer payments service, Zelle has become a staple offering for most financial institutions. Even so, the network found room to expand last year, onboarding 337 new institutions.
Nearly all of these new partners were community banks or credit unions managing less than $10 billion in assets. Collectively, these institutions serve a broad mix of customers, including farmers, small businesses, and underserved communities.
Alongside this expansion, Zelle also highlighted the growing range of use cases on its platform. Although the network was originally designed for P2P payments, consumers are increasingly using Zelle for everyday transactions, including recurring expenses like rent and utility payments.
Embedding the Platform
Since its launch in 2017, Zelle has continued to grow by leaps and bounds, driven in large part by its formidable backing. The organization is owned by Early Warning Services, a consortium of seven of the largest U.S. financial institutions, including JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo.
Zelle was initially launched in response to the surging popularity of P2P apps like Venmo, PayPal, and Cash App. However, the network diverged from that model by jettisoning its app and instead embedding its service directly into financial institutions’ mobile and online banking platforms.
A Successful Model
That approach has proven successful. Through the first half of last year, , U.S. consumers and small businesses completed roughly two billion transactions on Zelle—representing a 19% year-over-year increase. Total transaction value rose by nearly 25%, reaching almost $600 billion. Small business payments were the platform’s fastest-growing segment, increasing by nearly a third year-over-year.
Despite this momentum, Zelle has faced notable challenges in recent years. One of the platform’s biggest benefits—near-real-time settlement—can also be a liability. Once a payment is sent, it is often irrevocable, leaving limited recourse for users who are defrauded into authorizing transactions.
As scams have become more widespread, Zelle has drawn scrutiny from the U.S. Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, as well as a lawsuit from New York State over fraud protections on the platform. The lawsuit alleged that Early Warning Services was aware of the network’s vulnerabilities but failed to adequately address them.
In response, Zelle has maintained that because users were tricked into sending money, there was no inherent flaw in the system itself. However, JPMorgan Chase recently updated Zelle’s terms of service to grant the institution greater authority to delay or cancel payments—especially those originating from social media—largely in response to mounting fraud concerns.








