Presumably, the limits are set by each bank (for their own customers). For example, BoA has these:
https://www.bankofamerica.com/online-banking/zelle-transfer-...
There is no limit to receive, but if you want different limits for sending, then perhaps you should change banks? Although, the above limits seem pretty generous for an instant, non reversible transfer of money.
If you want to instantly transfer more than, say, $15k, then presumably you would want more reversibility.
Zelle is lying when it says that it's a "network." All it does is shoot debit payments between supported banks; it's not doing any settlement on its own. The fact that it can be pushed around/constrained by each bank shows this.
> There is no limit to receive, but if you want different limits for sending, then perhaps you should change banks? Although, the above limits seem pretty generous for an instant, non reversible transfer of money.
I bank with a large investment bank that otherwise has excellent service (as in, "a human picks up the phone anytime of day" levels of service). I'm not going to drop them because Zelle fails to abstract over them correctly; every other third party payment app does this correctly.
> If you want to instantly transfer more than, say, $15k, then presumably you would want more reversibility.
My bank's Zelle limit is well below $15k per month, not even day. And to be clear: I don't personally care about instant settlement; I'm forced to use Zelle.
Why would you hold it against Discover to prefer to not use Visa and MasterCard networks?