The company said the requests were made between December 1, 2012 and May 31 this year.
"The most common of these requests concerned fraud, homicides, kidnappings, and other criminal investigations," Yahoo said in a statement posted on its Tumblr page.
Others were made under the U.S. Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, it said.
Technology companies have been under pressure to disclose the precise nature of their cooperation with the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA) after leaked documents showed it had been acquiring consumer data from them for years.
Edward Snowden, a disillusioned former CIA computer technician who had worked as a contractor at the NSA, identified himself as the source of multiple disclosures on the surveillance that were published by the Guardian and the Washington Post this month.
The reports fuelled a passionate debate in the United States over how to balance civil liberties and the right to individual privacy with concerns about national security.
Apple Inc, Microsoft and Facebook have also disclosed the number of data requests they received from U.S. law enforcement authorities.
The companies denied the NSA had any direct access to their servers and said consumer data was only handed over if the request was in the form of a court order.
© Thomson Reuters 2013
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