The distribution of particles inside hadronic jets produced in the decay of boosted W and Z bosons can be used to discriminate such jets from the continuum background. Given that a jet has been identified as likely resulting from the hadronic decay of a boosted W or Z boson, this paper presents a technique for further differentiating Z bosons from W bosons. The variables used are jet mass, jet charge, and a b-tagging discriminant. A likelihood tagger is constructed from these variables and tested in the simulation of W'rightarrow WZ for bosons in the transverse momentum range 200 GeV <p_text {T}< 400 GeV in sqrt{s}=8 TeV pp collisions with the ATLAS detector at the LHC. For Z-boson tagging efficiencies of epsilon _Z=90, 50, and 10,%, one can achieve W^+-boson tagging rejection factors (1/epsilon _{W^+}) of 1.7, 8.3 and 1000, respectively. It is not possible to measure these efficiencies in the data due to the lack of a pure sample of high p_text {T}, hadronically decaying Z bosons. However, the modelling of the tagger inputs for boosted W bosons is studied in data using a tbar{t}-enriched sample of events in 20.3 fb{}^{-1} of data at sqrt{s}=8 TeV. The inputs are well modelled within uncertainties, which builds confidence in the expected tagger performance.