The perfect fantasy football draft strategy for the 2025 season
Fantasy football draft season has arrived, and every edge matters if you want to outsmart your league. That’s where we come in. Welcome to the 2025 edition of the Perfect Draft, your round-by-round road map to building the strongest possible roster from any draft slot.
Before we dive in, a quick reminder of what we mean by “perfect.” This isn’t about following average draft position blindly or chasing last year’s breakout stars. Instead, we optimize each pick by blending expert rankings with 2025-specific factors: injury risk, projected opportunity, positional scarcity and strength of schedule.
The result? Draft strategies that are built to outperform the average team week after week, positioning you to make a deep playoff run.
Our process begins with consensus expert rankings from FantasyPros and layers on our own projections, adjusted for injury probability and other context. This allows us to pinpoint where the real value lies. You can read more about the methodology here.
Keep in mind: This is the perfect draft based on our 2025 outlook, which may differ sharply from public average draft positions. That’s by design. When a player goes earlier or later than expected, it can give you an advantage. Use it.
(The draft grids below were crafted for a 12-team, point-per-reception league using the following starting lineup: one quarterback, two running backs, two wide receivers, one tight end, one flex player (RB/WR/TE), one defense, a kicker and seven bench players.)
Prioritize elite running backs early, chase upside late
When drafting in the top two rounds, only take a running back if you can land a true difference-maker. Bijan Robinson (Atlanta Falcons) remains the premier option, offering three-down volume, red-zone usage and receiving upside. Jahmyr Gibbs (Detroit Lions) is another ideal early-round target in point-per-reception formats, thanks to his elite explosiveness and pass-catching ability.
Saquon Barkley (Philadelphia Eagles), however, is a risk because of his age, injury history and previous workload. Draft him with caution.
Las Vegas Raiders rookie Ashton Jeanty is drafted higher here than most cheat sheets, thanks to a big expected workload under new Coach Pete Carroll. In the past two NFL seasons he coached, 2022 and 2023, the lead backs in Carroll’s offense averaged 57 percent of the team’s carries, per data from TruMedia, compared to the league average of less than 50 percent. Jeanty, the No. 6 overall pick in this year’s NFL draft, is poised for a big debut season.
If none of the elite backs are available, pivot to wide receiver and embrace Zero RB – a draft strategy in which you skip running backs early and load up on wide receivers, a top tight end and a top quarterback. You then draft late-round or waiver-wire running backs with breakout potential. Be warned, though, you need these late running backs to be productive or your whole season will fall apart.
Invest in wide receivers early, and stack depth throughout
From Rounds 1 through 7, focus on securing alpha wideouts who can anchor your weekly scoring. Ja’Marr Chase (Cincinnati Bengals) and Justin Jefferson (Minnesota Vikings) are the top options, but our projections like Brian Thomas Jr. (Jacksonville Jaguars) as the No. 3 option, followed by Nico Collins (Houston Texans) and Puka Nacua of the Los Angeles Rams. Even if you miss on the top options, though, you’ll find tremendous value in emerging breakout candidates such as the Falcons’ Drake London and the Giants’ Malik Nabers.
From Rounds 8 to 12, the goal shifts to depth and upside. Target slot specialists such as Josh Downs of the Indianapolis Colts or point-per-reception-friendly players such as Chris Olave (New Orleans Saints) who can deliver WR3 production. Also look for rookies with major roles (Tetairoa McMillan of the Carolina Panthers or Emeka Egbuka of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers).
In later rounds, stash wide receivers with WR3 or flex potential if things break right. That includes return-from-injury candidates such as Christian Watson (Green Bay Packers) or young wide receivers in unsettled depth charts such as Marvin Mims Jr. (Denver Broncos). These picks won’t win you the week early on but they could be difference-makers by November.
Overall, wide receiver is where you should be aggressive early and often.
Lock in a top tight end early, or wait for breakout candidates
For 2025, the optimal tight end strategy is simple, either secure an elite option early or wait for mid-to-late value – just don’t consider the middle tiers.
If selecting in Rounds 2 to 4 target Brock Bowers of the Raiders, Trey McBride of the Arizona Cardinals or George Kittle of the San Francisco 49ers. Bowers dominated as a rookie with record-setting reception and yardage totals, earning all‑pro and Pro Bowl honors. McBride posted 111 receptions for 1,146 yards last season and projects as a high-floor, high-ceiling target monster. Kittle remains a volatile but elite playmaker with weekly upside in a potent offense.
In Round 13, make a TE2 dart throw, perhaps a rookie such as Colston Loveland (Chicago Bears) or the Colts’ Tyler Warren, players who carry major upside if given opportunity later in the season.
Be patient at quarterback and wait for value
The perfect quarterback draft strategy in 2025 hinges on patience and positional value. In Round 3, consider drafting a top quarterback such as Cincinnati’s Joe Burrow, the Washington Commanders’ Jayden Daniels, the Baltimore Ravens’ Lamar Jackson, the Buffalo Bills’ Josh Allen or Philadelphia’s Jalen Hurts.
However, the sweet spot for landing your QB1 is Rounds 6 to 10. This is where you’ll find high-upside options such as Justin Fields, now operating in a more modern New York Jets offense, and Brock Purdy, a steady, efficient producer in a loaded San Francisco scheme. In general, you should prioritize quarterbacks with either elite rushing upside or a high weekly floor tied to offensive efficiency.
If looking to round out your roster with a backup quarterback, take a shot on one playing in a new system or bounce-back situation, such as Las Vegas’s Geno Smith or the Seattle Seahawks’ Sam Darnold.