For me and I’m sure several others, the new fantasy football season really begins after the NFL Draft. We’ve made it through free agency, we now know where rookies are at, and it’s time to see what’s what and how we feel about it all.
And with that in mind, now is when I work on my first set of team power rankings for fantasy football. Those are below.
But a couple of things feel different this year, make today’s assignment a little trickier than usual.
The first one isn’t a big deal, I suppose, but I want to acknowledge it. The 2026 NFL Draft felt a little bit like an ellipse. It wasn’t a deep draft for skill position players and there isn’t as much rookie bump element to these rankings. That doesn’t have to be good or bad. It’s just different.
The second quirky issue is the state of quarterback play. The NFL had a slew of quarterback injuries and slumps last season, and those facts and memories seep into what we expect this year.
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Lamar Jackson has to be better, right?
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Can the Vikings fix Kyler Murray (or boot up J.J. McCarthy)?
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When will Patrick Mahomes be ready, and can the Chiefs become elite again?
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Is Daniel Jones going to be healthy enough to lead a Colts offense that’s loaded with fun pieces?
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Will Jalen Hurts be happy and productive with this new-look Eagles offense?
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What does the Jayden Daniels comeback look like?
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Is Malik Willis ready for his close up?
Those are just some of the quarterback dramas in front of us — there are more. I’ll just want to underscore that this position feels less certain than it usually does during this time in spring. I know I regularly refer to the NFL as a reshuffle league, but analysis and projection feels a little more challenging when we’re not positive about the quarterbacks.
Take that for what it’s worth and let’s rank the offenses, starting from the bottom and working up to the top.
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32. Tennessee Titans
I thought Cam Ward did a respectable job keeping his head above water as a rookie despite very modest help — it reminded me a little bit of Drake Maye in 2024. Carnell Tate and Wan’Dale Robinson weren’t perfect fixes for the Tennessee receiver room, but it was the best Tennessee could do with the available options. Tony Pollard was a fantasy winner after the Titans mostly ignored the RB position at the draft (Nicholas Singleton landed in the fifth round).
31. New York Jets
I still think Garrett Wilson has a top-10 receiver season in him if the quarterback play is competent — hopefully Geno Smith can approach that level. It feels like Breece Hall has been in 100 prospective trades over the last year but he’s still in New York, and will probably be a third-round pick in most pools.
30. Pittsburgh Steelers
Half of my mind says I don’t want to see Aaron Rodgers play again, and then I examine the rest of the Pittsburgh depth chart and I start to change my mind. The backfield looks like another platoon and DK Metcalf and Michael Pittman Jr. are just support receivers these days, not primary players we can trust every week.
29. Cleveland Browns
Quinshon Judkins and Harold Fannin Jr. had impressive rookie years and the Browns drafted some interesting receivers last week (anything that gives me less Jerry Jeudy in my life, I’m in favor of). But a quarterback room of Deshaun Watson, Shedeur Sanders and Dillon Gabriel is an upside-capper.
28. Las Vegas Raiders
Brock Bowers only needs health to be a dominant player and Ashton Jeanty was solid as a rookie, helped in the second half by an increased role in the passing game. Kirk Cousins looked dusted in his final Atlanta days, but the Raiders probably don’t want to rush Fernando Mendoza into the NFL. The less we say about the Las Vegas receiver room, the better.
2026 Consensus Fantasy Football Rankings
27. New Orleans Saints
This was a fun team in the second half of 2025 and it could be fun from the jump this season. Kellen Moore was a home-run hire at head coach and Tyler Shough, no matter his age, proved he belonged in the NFL. Don’t sleep on tight end Juwan Johnson, one of the league’s most improved players last year.
26. Miami Dolphins
It feels like we’ve seen a lot of Malik Willis because it’s been spread over three seasons, but he’s still made just six NFL starts. Miami made an intelligent guess by signing him, but it’s still a guess. Willis is going to need his best improvisational skills, given the shaky WR room he’s been dealt.
25. Washington Commanders
The Commanders were fifth in points and seventh in yards two seasons ago, and then 22nd in points and 22nd in yards last season. That’s the difference between healthy Jayden Daniels and hurt Jayden Daniels. It would be a significant boost if rookie slot Antonio Williams can produce right away; Washington’s old roster was part of the 2025 collapse.
24. Carolina Panthers
Tetairoa McMillan justified the hype quickly as a rookie, and Chuba Hubbard has the look of a boring-but-useful middle-round pick. Most of Bryce Young’s efficiency metrics are still below average; this is probably the season where we come to final conclusions on him.
23. Houston Texans
I’ve stopped dreaming of a full season for Nico Collins — I’ll gladly take the 15 games he played in 2023 and 2025. David Montgomery probably has one bell-cow season left into his age-29 campaign, given the relative workload he was exposed to in recent years.
22. Arizona Cardinals
I could only go so low on this offense, given the presence of all-world TE Trey McBride and rookie hotshot Jeremiyah Love. The backfield has a crowding issue, but it’s possible a big-name backup will be cut in the summer. It’s interesting to see Marvin Harrison Jr. and Michael Wilson have converging ADPs in early draft season.
21. Tampa Bay Buccaneers
It’s almost shocking that Baker Mayfield played a full season last year, battling through shoulder, ankle, knee and oblique injuries. Now he has to make it work without Mike Evans, but WR Emeka Egbuka could be ready for a sophomore spike.
20. Los Angeles Chargers
Given that the offensive line collapsed from the jump last year, it was a near-miracle to get to the playoffs. Ladd McConkey looked like a star at the end of 2024 but was ordinary all through last season. The Chargers need to give him every opportunity to separate from the rest of the WR room.
19. Minnesota Vikings
I’ve said for years that I’d follow Kevin O’Connell into a burning building, but last year the house burned down. Maybe that’s more about J.J. McCarthy than anything else, and I love the positive Kyler Murray vibes entering the summer.
18. Jacksonville Jaguars
The Trevor Lawrence breakout was a fantasy blast, but it was largely tied to touchdown deodorant. I’d feel a little bit better if his efficiency stats also came along for the ride. Brian Thomas Jr. is a tricky call after a dreamy rookie year and a perplexing second one.
17. Kansas City Chiefs
The backslide isn’t a new story — the Chiefs rank 21st, 15th and 15th in points the last three years. Still, if Patrick Mahomes and Rashee Rice are healthy, you can potentially talk yourself into an Andy Reid offense again.
16. Green Bay Packers
Jordan Love still feels like a front-nine player but this is going to be his age-28 season. Are the Packers ever going to give a receiver 100 or more targets again? Christian Watson, Jayden Reed and even Matthew Golden all have an upside story to tell, and yet zero floor to fall back on. Tucker Kraft was smashing at tight end before his ACL injury.
15. Denver Broncos
Bo Nix has been QB7 for two straight years, but it’s felt more like a Sean Payton mirror show than anything else. But maybe the Broncos acquired Jaylen Waddle at the right time. RJ Harvey was a touchdown gobbler last year, but he’s still slotted behind respected vet J.K. Dobbins and now fourth-round pick Jonah Coleman is also in the mix.
14. New York Giants
You can see the path to this being a fun offense — keep Jaxson Dart, Malik Nabers and Cam Skattebo healthy and away we go. But Dart might have to run less proactively this year after last season’s concussion issues, and he’s basically starting fresh with Nabers — they hardly played together last season.
13. Seattle Seahawks
This probably feels low for a team coming off a dominant Super Bowl run, but so much of that was driven by the defense. Sam Darnold was a heartwarming story but he was merely the QB13 last season. Jaxon Smith-Njigba is the only obvious smash pick in this offense, while first-rounder Jadarian Price is likely to get pushed up summer draft boards.
12. Atlanta Falcons
No matter what you think of Michael Penix Jr., he has tools around him — Bijan Robinson, Drake London, Kyle Pitts. Ultimately Penix will determine if this is a good offense or a terrific one. But the Falcons probably have too much talent to fail in 2026.
11. Cincinnati Bengals
They’re still set up to be a perfect carnival team, a juicy passing game and a leaky defense. But the ultimate story comes down to Joe Burrow’s availability. He played a full season in 2024 and the Bengals drove us to fantasy glory. He missed nine games last year, seven games in 2023 and six games as a rookie. If I knew Burrow had a full season coming, I’d be exploring MVP markets right now.
10. New England Patriots
Despite a pedestrian receiver room, the Patriots still were second in points and third in yards last year. Obviously part of that was a weak schedule talking, but Drake Maye has proven to be the genuine article, and A.J. Brown (likely here by June) is just what he needs downfield.
9. Baltimore Ravens
A healthy and engaged Lamar Jackson could push this offense to the top of the list. Derrick Henry probably isn’t done yet, Zay Flowers has star potential, and Mark Andrews has the TE reps mostly to himself again. But Jackson does begin his age-29 season, and his rushing juice is trending in the wrong direction.
8. Indianapolis Colts
Jonathan Taylor is a weekly staple, Tyler Warren has star written all over him, Alec Pierce takes the top off a defense, Josh Downs is a good player. It all comes down to how healthy Daniel Jones is.
7. Chicago Bears
Like the rest of the world, I’ve been dreaming of Colston Loveland shares for several months. Caleb Williams started to look the superstar part in his first Ben Johnson season, and Williams is still just 24. One word of caution — the 2025 Bears looked a lot like the 2024 Commanders, a team bitten by regression last year.
6. Philadelphia Eagles
A.J. Brown is a dynamite player but maybe the time is right for an amicable divorce. Anytime I think about the Eagles offense, I wonder how happy everyone is. For the fifth straight year, Jalen Hurts is working with a new offensive coordinator.
5. Buffalo Bills
Josh Allen keeps plunging in for all those touchdowns, and I’m optimistic DJ Moore can be a legitimate No. 1 receiver again. Dalton Kincaid was trying to have a breakout year last season, but it was muted by injuries. I’m interested to draft him again.
4. Los Angeles Rams
Matthew Stafford owned the red zone last year, throwing for 33 touchdowns against just one pick. We need to remember he was QB15 and QB19 before the MVP run, and he’s stepping into an age-38 season. It’s also the age-34 year for WR Davante Adams.
3. San Francisco 49ers
Maybe Brock Purdy is a system quarterback, but hey, it’s Kyle Shanahan’s system. This is always a destination offense. Purdy led all quarterbacks in red-zone fantasy scoring last season, and the Niners are always teeming with multiple offensive weapons.
2. Dallas Cowboys
Maybe this feels too high for a team that had a losing record last year, but hey, we just want the points. CeeDee Lamb and George Pickens coexisted better than I expected, and Dak Prescott has always been an underrated point guard. Javonte Williams and Jake Ferguson feel like floor picks who still offer some upside.
1. Detroit Lions
Maybe it’s a little top heavy, but narrow concentration is a fantasy feature, not a bug. Jahmyr Gibbs gets the backfield essential to himself and Amon-Ra St. Brown is a first-round staple. Even if Jameson Williams and Sam LaPorta wind up as boom-bust picks, you have to be bullish on an indoor offense led by two undeniable superstars.