In situ electrochemical activation brings unexpected electrochemical performance improvements to electrode materials, but the mechanism behind it still needs further study. Herein, an electrochemically in situ defect induction in close-packed lattice plane of vanadium nitride oxide (VNx Oy ) in aqueous zinc-ion battery is reported. It is verified by theoretical calculation and experiment that the original compact structure is not suitable for the insert of Zn2+ ion, while a highly active one after the initial electrochemical activization accompanied by the in situ defect induction in close-packed lattice plane of VNx Oy exhibits efficient zinc ion storage. As expected, activated VNx Oy can achieve very high reversible capacity of 231.4mA h g-1 at 1 A g-1 and cycle stability upto 6000 cycles at 10 A g-1 with a capacity retention of 94.3%. This work proposes a new insight for understanding the electrochemically in situ transformation to obtain highly active cathode materials for the aqueous zinc-ion batteries.