2026 Dynasty Rankings
Superflex PPR · Top 75 dynasty rankings with tiers
Updated July 9, 2026
These are Cap's house dynasty rankings for the 2026 season — one opinionated Superflex PPR board, ordered with tiers so the value cliffs are visible. Use it to anchor startup drafts, trades, and rebuild decisions.
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| Rank | Movement | Player | Pos | Team | Tier | Cap's Take |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 | ||||||
| #1 | 0 | QB | BUF | 1 | The format starts here: elite weekly ceiling, age insulation, and no role ambiguity. | |
| #2 | 0 | QB | CHI | 1 | The bet is trajectory: premium arm talent with enough runway to absorb volatility. | |
| #3 | +1 | QB | WAS | 1 | Rushing production keeps the floor high while the passing profile still has room to grow. | |
| #4 | +1 | QB | CIN | 1 | A long-lived pocket passer attached to elite volume is still a cornerstone in Superflex. | |
| #5 | +1 | QB | BAL | 1 | The age curve is real, but so is the weekly advantage when the legs are part of the equation. | |
| #6 | - | QB | KCC | 1 | The market has cooled more than the long-term quarterback bet has changed. | |
| #7 | - | RB | ATL | 1 | The cleanest combination of age, workload, receiving value, and talent at running back. | |
| #8 | -1 | WR | CIN | 1 | Elite target earning plus quarterback stability makes this the safest non-QB anchor. | |
| #9 | +2 | RB | DET | 1 | Receiving value and explosive efficiency keep him insulated from ordinary backfield volatility. | |
| #10 | -1 | WR | LAR | 1 | The production is no longer a surprise; durability is the remaining tax at this price. | |
| Tier 2 | ||||||
| #11 | -1 | WR | SEA | 2 | The age-production intersection is exactly what dynasty managers should pay for. | |
| #12 | +1 | WR | MIN | 2 | Still an elite asset, with only quarterback uncertainty separating him from the top receiver tier. | |
| #13 | +5 | WR | DAL | 2 | Bankable volume and prime-age insulation matter more than short-term offensive noise. | |
| #14 | +2 | WR | DET | 2 | A target-share machine whose weekly floor keeps compounding in full PPR. | |
| #15 | -1 | QB | LAC | 2 | The ceiling depends on volume returning, but the franchise-quarterback foundation remains strong. | |
| #16 | - | QB | NEP | 2 | Young dual-threat quarterbacks with legitimate passing upside do not stay cheap for long. | |
| #17 | - | TE | LVR | 2 | A true difference-maker at a scarce position; the premium is justified by target-earning ability. | |
| #18 | +12 | RB | ARI | 2 | Youth and three-down upside push him into the premium back tier before the résumé is complete. | |
| #19 | -7 | RB | MIA | 2 | The touch count creates anxiety, but few players can swing a matchup on fewer opportunities. | |
| #20 | +13 | QB | PHI | 2 | Rushing touchdowns preserve elite outcomes even as the long-term passing debate continues. | |
| #21 | 0 | WR | ATL | 2 | Prime-age alpha usage gives him a path into the top receiver tier without projection gymnastics. | |
| #22 | - | RB | LVR | 2 | The market is paying for a workhorse profile; the receiving role determines whether it is cheap. | |
| #23 | 0 | WR | NYG | 2 | Target dominance travels; quarterback stability is the only thing holding the price below the elite tier. | |
| #24 | +19 | QB | DEN | 2 | A stable starting runway and useful mobility make him more valuable than his highlight ceiling suggests. | |
| #25 | +6 | TE | ARI | 2 | High-end target volume at tight end is one of the few repeatable positional edges. | |
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| Tier 3 | ||||||
| #26 | -9 | LB | DET | 3 | Youth, snap security, and tackle volume make him the IDP anchor of this board. | |
| #27 | -1 | WR | CAR | 3 | Size and target-earning upside create an alpha path; consistency is the next proof point. | |
| #28 | 0 | WR | HOU | 3 | The profile is elite when healthy, but target competition keeps the price below the top tier. | |
| #29 | - | QB | SFO | 3 | The system label suppresses a long-term starter whose efficiency keeps answering the question. | |
| #30 | -8 | RB | LAC | 3 | The dynasty case is simple: young feature-back traits in an offense built to use them. | |
| #31 | -7 | RB | IND | 3 | The production window is shorter now, but true workhorse volume remains difficult to replace. | |
| #32 | -5 | LB | BAL | 3 | A durable tackle base keeps him near the top even as younger linebackers close the gap. | |
| #33 | +1 | WR | NYJ | 3 | The talent and target share remain premium; the offense still owes managers a cleaner payoff. | |
| #34 | +11 | WR | LAC | 3 | Separation and quarterback fit create a high floor, with enough volume upside for more. | |
| #35 | -6 | RB | BUF | 3 | Efficient offense and receiving utility offset a touchdown ceiling that can move year to year. | |
| #36 | +4 | RB | NYJ | 3 | The discount is warranted, but the all-purpose talent still offers a fast route back up the board. | |
| #37 | +4 | WR | DAL | 3 | Volatility comes with the package; contested-play upside and a stronger environment keep it investable. | |
| #38 | -2 | LB | CLE | 3 | A young every-down linebacker with volume upside is exactly the IDP profile to accumulate. | |
| #39 | -2 | TE | CHI | 3 | The long view favors route-running tight ends tied to ascending quarterbacks. | |
| #40 | -1 | TE | IND | 3 | Usage versatility raises the ceiling, though the passing ecosystem still sets the weekly floor. | |
| #41 | +19 | DE | LAR | 3 | Age matters less when the pressure profile remains this dominant at a scarce IDP spot. | |
| #42 | - | S | BAL | 3 | Alignment versatility produces more stable fantasy routes than a coverage-only safety profile. | |
| #43 | +1 | LB | MIA | 3 | Tackle volume keeps paying the bills; longevity is the question at this tier. | |
| #44 | +2 | LB | PHI | 3 | The role unlocked the production, and the market still discounts how sticky that usage can be. | |
| #45 | - | WR | TBB | 3 | A polished target earner with multiple deployment paths is a strong dynasty bet. | |
| #46 | +3 | WR | CHI | 3 | The talent is easy to buy; the crowded target tree makes patience part of the price. | |
| #47 | +3 | WR | TEN | 3 | The ceiling is alpha-level, but projection risk keeps him behind proven young producers. | |
| #48 | +3 | QB | DAL | 3 | A productive starter discount is useful in Superflex even without a long runway. | |
| #49 | -1 | LB | SEA | 3 | Reliable snap and tackle volume make him a weekly lineup stabilizer. | |
| #50 | +5 | RB | CLE | 3 | The rushing profile is strong enough to matter; passing-game usage decides the next tier jump. | |
| Tier 4 | ||||||
| #51 | +5 | TE | CLE | 4 | The receiving résumé is compelling, but tight-end development rarely moves in a straight line. | |
| #52 | +6 | LB | WAS | 4 | Athletic range and age create upside beyond the initial tackle projection. | |
| #53 | +6 | WR | CIN | 4 | A high-end second target can still produce WR1 stretches, but the weekly ceiling is shared. | |
| #54 | - | DE | HOU | 4 | Youth and pressure production make him the safest long-horizon edge bet after Garrett. | |
| #55 | - | DE | DET | 4 | The talent belongs higher; durability uncertainty is doing the ranking work. | |
| #56 | +6 | WR | DET | 4 | Explosive efficiency is real, but the target floor keeps the range of outcomes wide. | |
| #57 | +8 | TE | DET | 4 | The early ceiling remains in the profile even after the market corrected the price. | |
| #58 | +8 | RB | CIN | 4 | Useful receiving work supports the value, while backfield durability limits long-term insulation. | |
| #59 | +8 | WR | CHI | 4 | The talent has not changed; target competition simply stretches the breakout timeline. | |
| #60 | +10 | RB | LAR | 4 | Production wins in the short term, but workload and replacement risk cap the dynasty multiple. | |
| #61 | +12 | TE | ATL | 4 | The market has finally priced the frustration; any sustained usage spike becomes asymmetric upside. | |
| #62 | +13 | WR | BAL | 4 | A strong real-life receiver whose dynasty ceiling depends on a larger target share. | |
| #63 | +14 | WR | PHI | 4 | Efficiency and talent keep the floor useful, though the target hierarchy limits a true alpha outcome. | |
| #64 | +16 | RB | PHI | 4 | The window is short and powerful; contenders should value the points more than the resale curve. | |
| #65 | - | S | SEA | 4 | Size and role versatility create the kind of box-score paths dynasty DBs need. | |
| #66 | - | S | DET | 4 | Slot and box work give him a steadier tackle base than most defensive backs. | |
| #67 | - | DE | LVR | 4 | Relentless volume keeps the weekly floor elite even as age trims the horizon. | |
| #68 | - | S | LAC | 4 | When healthy, his deployment creates impact plays and tackles from the same roster slot. | |
| #69 | - | DE | NYG | 4 | The price is projection-heavy, but young edge production is worth paying ahead for. | |
| #70 | - | LB | SFO | 4 | The floor remains excellent; age pushes him behind younger volume bets. | |
| #71 | - | LB | GBP | 4 | Range and playmaking raise the ceiling, with snap stability now the key variable. | |
| #72 | - | RB | KCC | 4 | The environment can amplify the talent, but health and backfield sharing keep the price honest. | |
| #73 | +5 | TE | NYJ | 4 | A premium athlete at a slow-developing position belongs in the patience portfolio. | |
| #74 | - | S | DAL | 4 | Youth, instincts, and flexible deployment offer rare insulation at defensive back. | |
| #75 | - | DE | GBP | 4 | Elite pressure creation keeps him foundational even when tackle scoring favors linebackers. | |
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