NEW YORK, NY/CHARLOTTE, NC – Zelle® today announced a pilot with Truist Financial Corp. to evaluate the use of Zelle for bill payments, with Truist teammates participating in early testing ahead of broader consumer availability. The effort explores how greater payment certainty could help simplify one of the most common — and often stressful — financial tasks for consumers.
This pilot is part of Zelle® Forward, the network’s initiative focused on expanding Zelle into practical, real-world payment use cases, with Truist serving as the lead pilot partner for bill payments. After more than $1.2 trillion was sent using Zelle last year, the pilot examines how consumers could use Zelle to pay recurring credit card bills — with the potential for other bill pay applications such as rent, utilities, mobile services and auto payments — directly to billers with greater confidence around timing and confirmation.1
This work marks a shift from technical validation to everyday application — bringing Truist’s earlier milestone as the first financial institution to send and receive alias-based requests for payment with real-time settlement into a consumer-facing network. Testing now focuses on end-to-end predictability, using fast confirmation and posting behavior to support consistent outcomes for consumers and billers across routine bill payments.
“The problem with bill pay isn’t speed — it’s certainty,” said Chris Ward, head of Enterprise Payments at Truist. “Trust is built on knowing when a payment is received and how it posts, which is why we apply simplicity, speed, safety and smart execution, with a purpose-driven commitment, to meet this high frequency household need. Early testing aims to demonstrate how real time confirmation and alias based payments can deliver clearer outcomes for consumers and more predictable flows for billers.”
Traditional bill payment methods can involve processing delays that contribute to missed deadlines, late fees or service interruptions. In 2024, 17% of adults reported not paying all their bills in full in the prior month, highlighting the ongoing financial pressure many households face.2
The pilot points to several ways bill payments could function differently than traditional methods:
- Improve certainty around when payments are received and confirmed
- Strengthen transparency and security by eliminating the need to share account numbers
- Support more predictable posting and reconciliation for routine payments
- Accelerate access to funds for billers once payments are made
- Reduce stress and uncertainty associated with due dates
In March, Zelle launched Zelle® Forward, an initiative focused on expanding the network into new, practical payment use cases in partnership with participating financial institutions.
“Zelle® Forward is about pushing beyond what’s possible today and we are proud to partner with Truist on this latest effort,” said Denise Leonhard, general manager of Zelle. “We’re focused on solving real problems – like the friction that comes with paying bills – and delivering a fast, reliable experience that consumers and businesses can count on.”
About Zelle®
Zelle® powers fast, reliable person-to-person digital payments, moving more than $1 trillion between millions of consumer and small business accounts at United States banks and credit unions. Available through a network of more than 2,300 financial institutions, Zelle® enables people to send and receive money directly – without cash, checks or third-party apps. Zelle® is owned and operated by Early Warning Services, LLC, which works with America’s banks, credit unions and government agencies to drive prosperity, deliver bold innovation and improve how payments are made. Learn more at www.zelle.com.
About Truist
Truist Financial Corporation is a purpose-driven financial services company committed to inspiring and building better lives and communities. Headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, Truist has leading market share in many of the high-growth markets in the U.S. and offers a wide range of products and services through wholesale and consumer businesses, including consumer and small business banking, commercial and corporate banking, investment banking and capital markets, wealth management, payments, and specialized lending businesses. Truist is a top-10 commercial bank with total assets of $549 billion as of March 31, 2026. Truist Bank, Member FDIC. Equal Housing Lender. Learn more at Truist.com.
Media May Contact:
Zelle
Eric Blankenbaker
Eric.Blankenbaker@earlywarning.com
929.745.0923
Truist
Don Wyar
Don.Wyar@Truist.com
214.335.6123
1 This pilot is a limited, exploratory and controlled test conducted with a participating institution. It is not available across the Zelle Network, and any broader deployment would depend on early learnings and whether future expansion is appropriate.
2 Federal Reserve. (2025). Economic well-being of U.S. households in 2024: Income and expenses. https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/2025-economic-well-being-of-us-households-in-2024-income-and-expenses.htm