Tourmalines are a group of minerals which may concentrate various accessory components, e.g., Cu, Ni, Zn, Bi, Ti, and Sn. The paper presents fluor-elbaite and elbaite from a dyke of the Julianna pegmatitic system at Piława Górna, at the NE margin of the Bohemian Massif, SW Poland, containing up to 6.32 and 7.37 wt % ZnO, respectively. Such high amounts of ZnO are almost two times higher than in the second most Zn-enriched tourmaline known to date. The compositions of the Zn-rich tourmalines from Piława Górna, studied by electron micropropy and Raman spectroscopy, correspond to the formulae: X (Na 0.733 Ca 0.013 0.254) Σ1 Y (Al 1.033 Li 0.792 Zn 0.755 Fe 2+ 0.326 Mn 0.094) Σ3 Z Al 6 (T Si 6 O 18)(BO 3) 3 V (OH) 3 W (F 0.654 OH 0.344), and X (Na 0.779 Ca 0.015 0.206) Σ1 Y (Al 1.061 Li 0.869 Zn 0.880 Fe 2+ 0.098 Mn 0.094) Σ3 Z Al 6 (T Si 6 O 18)(BO 3) 3 V (OH) 3 W (OH 0.837 F 0.163), respectively, with Zn as one of the main octahedral occupants. A comparison with other tourmalines and associated Zn-rich fluor-elbaite and elbaite from the pegmatite indicates that atypically high Zn-enrichment is not a result of Zn-Fe fractionation, but dissolution and reprecipitation induced by a late (Na,Li,B,F)-bearing fluid within the assemblage of gahnite spinel and primary schorl-type tourmaline. This strongly suggests Na-Li-B-F metasomatism of gahnite-bearing mineral assemblages as that is the only environment that can promote crystallization of a hypothetical Zn-dominant tourmaline. The compositions of the Zn-rich fluor-elbaite and elbaite suggest three possible end-members for such a hypothetical tourmaline species: NaZn 3 Al 6 (Si 6 O 18)(BO 3) 3 (OH) 3 (OH), (Zn 2 Al)Al 6 (Si 6 O 18)(BO 3) 3 (OH) 3 (OH) and Na(Zn 2 Al)Al 6 (Si 6 O 18)(BO 3) 3 (OH) 3 O by analogy with other tourmalines with divalent Y occupants, such as schorl/foitite/oxy-schorl and dravite/magnesio-foitite/oxy-dravite.