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Reviewed by ScamReporting Editorial · Editorial standards
Reported July 2026 — Editors flagged elevated reports of Zelle payment reversals across U.S. consumer hotlines and reader submissions.
Quick answer
There is no “safe refund” that requires you to send a new Zelle payment. If someone calls claiming to be your bank and tells you to “reverse” a transfer by sending money to a different account, it’s almost always a scam.
How This Scam Works
- Bank spoofing: The caller ID may show your bank’s name or a local number.
- Fake fraud story: They claim a Zelle transfer was sent from your account or “accidentally” sent to you.
- “Reversal” instruction: They instruct you to send a Zelle payment to “return the funds” or to a “secure hold” account.
- Lock-in pressure: They keep you on the phone so you don’t call the real bank.

Red Flags
- They demand you send a new payment to “fix” a payment problem
- They ask you to read one-time passcodes or approve a “verification” prompt
- They insist you stay on the line and not contact the bank yourself
- They threaten account closure, arrest, or immediate loss unless you act now
- They direct you to a link or phone number that isn’t your bank’s official contact
What To Do
- Hang up and call the number on the back of your card (or your bank’s official app).
- Do not send any “refund” payment using Zelle, Venmo, Cash App, gift cards, or crypto.
- Search the sender in our Scammer Lookup and save evidence (screenshots, numbers, emails).
- Report the attempt to your bank and to the FTC at ReportFraud.ftc.gov.
See the full breakdown in our guide: Zelle scam refund trick.
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