Zelle Law Enforcement Requests: How Police Get Zelle Records (Early Warning Services + the Banks)
Zelle has no law-enforcement portal. This guide explains the dual-track legal process U.S. investigators must use: a subpoena to Early Warning Services for network transaction metadata, plus separate legal process served on the sending and receiving banks for account and identity data.
Zelle is operated by Early Warning Services, LLC (EWS) and, unlike most platforms, has no law-enforcement request portal. Obtaining Zelle-related records is a dual-track legal process: serve EWS for network transaction metadata, and serve the participating banks for the account, identity and funds data. This guide is for authorised U.S. investigators.
- No portal. All subpoenas, court orders and warrants must be served on Early Warning Services and on the banks involved
- Track A — Early Warning Services: holds Zelle network data (enrollment phone/email, payment/transaction IDs, timestamps). Serve [email protected] or Early Warning Services, LLC, Attn: Subpoena Processing, 5801 N Pima Rd, Scottsdale, AZ 85250
- Track B — the banks: the sending and receiving banks hold the account numbers, balances, account-holder identity and the funds. Serve separate legal process on each bank
- Typical EWS response time: about 30–40 days
Track A — Early Warning Services (network metadata)
EWS maintains the Zelle network layer: enrollment records (the phone number or email linked to a Zelle enrollment), payment and transaction IDs, and timestamps. EWS does not hold funds — money moves directly between insured deposit accounts at the participating banks.
- Serve by secure email: [email protected] (preferred), or by mail to the Scottsdale, AZ address above.
- Your subpoena must include: issuer contact details, where to send responsive records, applicable fees payable to Early Warning Services, LLC, and — for transaction records — the enrollment identifier (sender or recipient phone/email) or the Zelle transaction/payment ID(s).
- Note: subpoenas sent to the registered agent by fax/email are not accepted — use the subpoena channel above.
Track B — the participating banks (account & identity)
For account numbers, balances, account-holder identity and broader transaction history, serve legal process directly on the sending and receiving financial institutions. Banks are the ECPA-covered record holders here, and they are also where any preservation and time-sensitive / emergency requests must go — EWS does not publish a preservation or emergency-disclosure process, because it is a payment-network operator, not a communications provider.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a Zelle law enforcement portal? No. Requests go to Early Warning Services (network metadata) and to the banks (account/funds data) — there is no consumer-style platform portal.
What can a subpoena to Early Warning Services get me? Zelle network metadata — enrollment phone/email, payment/transaction IDs and timestamps. Not account numbers, balances or the funds; those are at the banks.
How do I preserve Zelle records? EWS publishes no § 2703(f)-style preservation process. For preservation and emergencies, serve the participating bank(s) directly.
See also
- Overview: law-enforcement data-request portals across all platforms
- What is LERS? Law-Enforcement Response Systems, explained