Organic redox-active materials are promising electrode candidates for the next generation of rechargeable batteries owing to their versatile redox chemistry, sustainability, and potential low cost. Here, we present polydiphenylamine as a moderately high-voltage (1.25 V vs. Zn) and highly reversible organic cathode for aqueous zinc batteries. As revealed by cyclic voltammetry and spectroscopic analysis, the chemical oxidation–derived diphenylamine dimer electrochemically transforms into a cross-linked polymeric material during the first electrochemical oxidation (charge), which then operates by p-doping/dedoping redox of the amine center and a pseudocapacitor-like solid-state charge storage mechanism during the subsequent discharge-charge cycles. With an 80 wt% active loading, the polymer cathode delivers a specific capacity of 138 mAh/g at 100 mA/g, with 73% retention over 1000 cycles at a 99.8% Coulombic efficiency. Excellent rate capability is evidenced by 87 mAh/g capacity at 400 mA/g and highly stable cycling of over 1200 cycles under variable current rates. Facile one-step synthesis, fast charge storage kinetics, and attractive electrochemical performance establish polydiphenylamine as a notable organic cathode candidate for aqueous zinc batteries.