Entity
Bank of New York Mellon Corp
Ticker
BNY, BNY-PK
Industry
State Commercial Banks
Location
NEW YORK, NY
Checked
July 5, 2026
What an EIN is — and isn't

An Employer Identification Number is the IRS's public identifier for a business or organization — the business equivalent of an SSN, but not a secret. You'll need it for W-2s, 1099s, and donation receipts. Knowing an EIN proves nothing about who you're talking to: never treat "they knew the EIN" as verification of a caller or invoice.

FAQ

13-2614959 questions

What is Bank of New York Mellon Corp's EIN?

13-2614959. It comes from Bank of New York Mellon Corp's own SEC filings record (source linked above), checked July 5, 2026. For tax filing, the authoritative copy is the one printed on your W-2 (box b) or 1099 — use that if it ever differs.

Is it safe that this EIN is public?

Yes — EINs are public identifiers, published in SEC filings and IRS records, and they're routinely shared on W-2s, 1099s, and donation receipts. Knowing one proves nothing about identity: never treat an EIN alone as verification of a caller, email, or invoice.

Where does this EIN come from?

From Bank of New York Mellon Corp's own submissions record with the SEC (the source linked on this page) — the company states its EIN in its filings. That's the same number employees see in box b of a W-2 from the company.

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Look up another EIN

Search by number or organization name in the EIN lookup, or find the number on your own paperwork — here's where to look for every situation, starting with box b of a W-2.