It is officially the offseason for all 32 NFL teams now that the Super Bowl has ended. That means we can fully shift our attention away from 2025 and look ahead to 2026.
There is no better time to take a step back and evaluate the free agent class heading into the offseason. Below you’ll find the top 100 free agents available heading into the 2026 season.
If you’re into the numbers, don’t miss Aaron Schatz’s legendary content and our StatsHub advanced stats research tool for next-level insights.
2026 NFL Offseason Free Agents: Top 100
1. Trey Hendrickson, EDGE
Age: 31.2
Trey Hendrickson hits free agency as the top available edge rusher coming off a season where he played just seven games due to a hip/pelvis/core injury. From 2020 to 2024, he averaged 16 games played, 14.1 sacks and 74.6 pressures per season.
2. George Pickens, WR
Age: 24.9
George Pickens’s first season with the Dallas Cowboys was a resounding success. The veteran receiver set career highs in targets (137), receptions (93), receiving yards (1,429) and touchdowns (9) and carried the offense when CeeDee Lamb was injured. According to FTN’s StatsHub, Pickens was third among all wide receivers in EPA (88.73) and among the top-12 receivers in yards per route run (2.4, 11th) and explosive play rate (16.1%, 11th).
He is expected to be franchise tagged by Dallas while they hopefully work out a long-term deal.
3. Tyler Linderbaum, OC
Age: 25.8
Tyler Linderbaum is the top free agent offensive lineman after logging four straight seasons in Baltimore with at least 1,000 snaps played and a 74.0 PFF grade. Linderbaum is a better fit for zone blocking schemes and has struggled in pass protection due to his lack of size (a 3.8% career pressure rate), but he can upgrade the center position for most teams in the NFL.
4. Jaelan Phillips, EDGE
Age: 26.6
Jaelan Phillips was excellent after a midseason trade to the Philadelphia Eagles, generating 41 pressures on 231 pass rush snaps (17.7%) with 2.0 sacks. Phillips has a history of severe lower-body injuries, but he is the most intriguing young pass rusher on the market this offseason.
5. Alec Pierce, WR
Age: 25.7
Alec Pierce took another step in 2025 by continuing to evolve from a field stretcher to a complete receiver while logging his first career 1,000-yard season. Over the last two seasons, Pierce has caught 84 of 153 targets for 1,827 yards and 13 touchdowns while averaging 21.8 yards per reception.
He should command a large contract for teams looking for a No. 1 receiver who can win over the middle of the field and on downfield targets.
6. Breece Hall, RB
Age: 24.7
Breece Hall enters free agency as the top running back on the market, fresh off his first career 1,000-yard rushing season. Hall racked up at least 1,300 all-purpose yards in each of his last three seasons and has at least five touchdowns over his first four seasons. According to StatsHub, Hall was fourth among running backs in juke rate (4.1%) and finished top 20 in avoided tackle rate (23.9%, RB18) and explosive run rate (10.7%, RB20).
Fantasy managers hope that Hall will land in a place that will utilize his three-down skill set fully and embrace his upside as a bell-cow producer.
7. Daniel Jones, QB
Age: 28.6
Daniel Jones enjoyed a career year in just 13 games with the Colts, completing 68.0% of his passes for 3,101 yards, 19 touchdowns and eight interceptions (plus 45 carries for 164 yards and five touchdowns). Unfortunately, his play dipped while navigating a fractured fibula before suffering a season-ending Achilles injury.
Jones returning to the Colts seemed like a no-brainer given his play (and it probably still is), but now the team will have to contend with a major injury recovery that could impact negotiations and delay the start of his 2026 season.
8. Rasheed Walker, OT
Age: 25.9
Teams are desperate to add offensive line talent, which makes Rasheed Walker a priority free agent in this class. Walker has started 48 games over the last three seasons with three straight years of a 64.0 or higher PFF grade.
He is far from a perfect left tackle as both a run blocker and pass protector (14 career sacks and 102 pressures on 1,649 pass blocking snaps), but he has yet to hit his prime and has plenty of NFL experience.
9. Odafe Oweh, EDGE
Age: 27.1
Odafe Oweh was excellent as an edge rusher after being traded to the Los Angeles Chargers before Week 6, racking up 35 pressures and 7.5 sacks in 12 games. Oweh has at least 47 pressures and 5.0 sacks in four of his first five professional seasons.
10. Kyle Pitts Sr., TE
Age: 25.2
Pitts showed he was healthy again in 2025, finishing second among tight ends in targets (118), receptions (88) and receiving yards (928) with five touchdowns. Pitts was used as a versatile piece in Atlanta, running 35.2% of his routes from the slot and 19% from out wide.
A healthy Pitts is an ideal tight end for teams looking to exploit matchups in 12 personnel (two tight end sets), which boosts his value heading into free agency.
11. Devin Lloyd, LB
Age: 27.3
It is rare for linebackers who have three-down abilities to hit free agency. Devin Lloyd has averaged 109 tackles in his first four seasons with nine interceptions (five in 2025) and 26 passes defended. He also has five fumble recoveries and 3.5 sacks in his career.
12. Riq Woolen, CB
Age: 26.8
Riq Woolen has struggled to reach the heights of his excellent rookie season (six interceptions), but there are few corners who offer his combination of size and speed.
Woolen has generated just six interceptions over the last three seasons (with 12 touchdowns allowed), but has at least eight pass breakups in every year of his career.
13. Alontae Taylor, CB
Age: 27.1
Alontae Taylor can play in the slot (1,664 snaps) and the speed to play outside (1,597 snaps). He has 32 career pass breakups with four interceptions but has shown a penchant to give up touchdowns (20 on 376 targets).
14. Mike Evans, WR
Age: 32.4
Injuries robbed Mike Evans of his 12th straight 1,000-yard season, but the veteran receiver still operated as Tampa Bay’s No. 1 receiver when healthy. Evans was targeted at least seven times in six of eight games.
Evans finished tied for 19th among receivers in created catches (four) and is still a big target in the red zone. His day as a high-end fantasy producer may be behind him, but he can still provide touchdown upside in the right offensive environment going forward.
15. John Franklin-Myers, DL
Age: 29.3
John Franklin-Myers’ play took a slight step back in 2025, but he’s still a versatile defensive lineman who can generate pressure from anywhere along the line. He has his second straight season with at least 7.0 sacks despite his pressures dropping from 53 to 39 from 2024 to 2025.
16. Kenneth Walker III, RB
Age: 25.2
Kenneth Walker III was once again relegated to a split backfield with Zach Charbonnet despite receiving a new offensive coordinator in 2025. Walker continued to show an exceptional ability to avoid tackles (34.4% avoided tackle rate, RB1) and generate explosive runs (14.9% rate, RB3) in a split backfield.
Fantasy managers hoping to see Walker in a new home in 2026 might have had those dreams dashed due to a knee injury to Charbonnet in the playoffs. That means the Super Bowl has a chance to return to the backfield next season, likely in an expanded role until his running mate is healthy enough to return.
17. Jaylen Watson, CB
Age: 27.3
Jaylen Watson stayed healthy in 2025 and rewarded the Chiefs with his best season, allowing just 35 receptions on 59 targets for 447 yards and two interceptions. Watson is a willing tackler as an outside cornerback and has allowed zero touchdowns on 87 targets the last two seasons.
18. Quay Walker, LB
Age: 25.7
Quay Walker is still developing but has proven to be a reliable run stopper since the Green Bay Packers selected him in the first round of the 2022 NFL Draft. Walker has started 57 games in his career, racking up 469 tackles (117.3 per season), 29 tackles for loss, 17 passes defended and 9.0 sacks in his career.
19. Malik Willis, QB
Age: 26.7
Malik Willis has earned an opportunity to be a full-time NFL starter. Over the last two seasons, Willis has five games with at least a 60% snap share with the Green Bay Packers. In those games, he completed 62 of 78 passes (79.4%) for 869 yards, four touchdowns and zero interceptions while adding 32 carries for 221 yards and three rushing scores.
Willis will undoubtedly be a sought-after free agent thanks to the underwhelming draft and free agent quarterback groups. If he can show his growth as a passer wasn’t due to good game planning, and maintain his rushing upside, he could be a steal for fantasy managers willing to take a chance on him in 2026.
20. Isaiah Likely, TE
Age: 25.8
Isaiah Likely was limited to just 14 games in 2025 thanks to a preseason foot injury. The injury forced the veteran tight end to produce career lows in targets (36), receptions (27), receiving yards (307) and touchdowns (1).
During his time in Baltimore, Likely showed that he can be a dynamic pass-catching weapon with the athleticism to play in the slot (74.3% slot rate in 2025, TE2). Fantasy managers will be hoping that he can land with a team that will be willing to make him a focal point in their passing attack so he can realize his pass-catching potential.
21. Braden Smith, OT
Age: 29.8
When healthy, Braden Smith is still an above-average right tackle, allowing just five sacks and 64 pressures on 1,231 pass-blocking snaps the last three years. However, he’s played more than 800 snaps just once since 2021. Smith could be a solid upgrade at right tackle for plenty of teams, but they will want to make sure they have a quality swing tackle if they sign him.
22. Travis Etienne Jr., RB
Age: 27.0
Travis Etienne Jr. enters free agency as the best producing running back but gets dinged in the rankings due to his age. He has three career seasons with at least 1,300 all-purpose yards and had a career-high 13 touchdowns in 2025. Etienne has proven to be a high-volume rusher, handling at least 220 carries in three of four career seasons.
The veteran running back can provide an explosive option in the backfield for many teams across the league and could see his stock rise in fantasy if he lands in a spot with an above-average offensive line.
23. Rashid Shaheed, WR
Age: 27.4
Rashid Shaheed is known for his speed, but he is an underrated route runner as well. He has averaged 14.7 yards per reception in his career but never earned a consistent enough target share in a fully healthy season to be a reliable fantasy option.
Shaheed will be highly sought after in free agency due to his speed and ability as a returner, but it will be hard to trust him in fantasy until a team makes an effort to feed him targets.
24. Boye Mafe, EDGE
Age: 27.1
Boye Mafe had his lowest snap share (50%) since his rookie year in 2025 as part of Seattle’s edge rushing rotation. He was still able to post his third straight season with at least 40 pressures while generating 20.0 sacks in his four-year career.
Mafe could be a highly sought-after player for teams hoping to unlock production with a more consistent role.
25. Khalil Mack, EDGE
Age: 34.9
A dislocated elbow limited Khalil Mack to 424 snaps in 2025, but he still generated 39 pressures and 5.5 sacks. Mack is still an effective pass rusher (11 straight seasons with 5.0 or more sacks) and is still a presence in the run game.
26. Jauan Jennings, WR
Age: 28.5
Injuries have helped Jauan Jennings increase his role over the last two seasons. He’s averaged 101.5 targets, 66.0 receptions, 809.0 receiving yards and 7.5 touchdowns during that time. Jennings has the size and strength to be a traditional outside receiver and has shown to be a reliable option over the middle of the field.
27. K’Lavon Chaisson, EDGE
Age: 26.5
K’Lavon Chaisson was an impact edge rusher in his lone season with the New England Patriots, setting career highs in pressures (54) and sacks (7.5). He’s a liability in the run game but should be in high demand as a situational edge rusher with untapped potential.
28. Connor McGovern, OC/OG
Age: 28.2
Over the last two seasons as the Buffalo Bills center, Connor McGovern has allowed zero sacks and a 3.2% pressure rate on 1,174 pass blocking snaps. The veteran offensive lineman has logged over 2,200 career snaps at left tackle, 2,000 career snaps at center and 700 snaps at right guard in his career.
29. Romeo Doubs, WR
Age: 25.8
Romeo Doubs has been the most consistent member of the Green Bay Packers receiving corps since being drafted. Over the last four seasons, he’s averaged 80.0 targets, 50.5 receptions, 606.0 yards and 5.3 touchdowns per season. Doubs has proven to be a reliable red zone target during his Packers tenure.
He could see a fantasy bump if he lands on a team looking for an outside receiver who can move the chains and win in the red zone. Almost anywhere he lands will have less of a wide receiver rotation than Green Bay, which is another small boost in his favor.
30. Ed Ingram, OG
Age: 26.9
Ed Ingram took a solid developmental step in his long season with the Houston Texans, posting a career-high 71.5 PFF grade and 75.6 run blocking grade. He still gives up a lot of pressures (24) and sacks (4) for a guard, but he’s showing improvement as he heads into his prime.
31. Bryan Cook, S
Age: 26.4
Bryan Cook enters free agency coming off the best season of his career with the Kansas City Chiefs. Cook has seen his role expand from being strictly a free safety to a deep safety and box defender hybrid. That has helped him average 81.5 tackles and 15 stops per season.
Cook has given up at least two touchdowns in his first four seasons but was credited with six of his eight career pass breakups in 2025.
32. Javonte Williams, RB
Age: 25.7
Javonte Williams made the most of his one-year deal with the Dallas Cowboys, handling 252 carries for 1,201 yards and 11 touchdowns while adding 35 receptions for 137 yards and two touchdowns as a receiver. Williams isn’t the most explosive back, but he’s a consistent rusher as evidenced by his top-10 finishes in success rate (45.6%, RB9), yards after contact (2.8, RB4), and stuffed run rate (11.5%, RB5).
Ideally, Williams will find a way to return to the Cowboys after such a successful season, but 2025 proved that he is healthy again and able to handle a big workload. He should see a consistent role regardless of where he lands.
33. Nahshon Wright, CB
Age: 27.3
Injuries forced Nahshon Wright into a prominent role in Chicago’s secondary, and he responded with a Pro Bowl caliber season, generating 80 total tackles, two forced fumbles, three fumble recoveries, six pass breakups and five interceptions.
Wright can be gotten in coverage (seven touchdowns allowed), but he has a nose for the ball and isn’t afraid to contribute in the run game.
34. Kam Curl, S
Age: 26.8
Kam Curl is coming off arguably his best professional season with the Los Angeles Rams, with 79 tackles, two interceptions, 2.0 sacks, three pass breakups and zero touchdowns allowed. Curl is a safety who can be deployed deep, in the slot, or as a box defender, which makes him a great fit for teams trying to counter the uptick in big personnel packages in offenses across the NFL.
35. Cade Mays, OC/OG
Age: 26.7
Injuries allowed Cade Mays to play a career-high 726 snaps at center for the Carolina Panthers in 2025. Over the last two seasons, he’s allowed zero sacks and just 21 pressures on 756 pass protection snaps.
36. Isaac Seumalo, OG
Age: 32.2
Isaac Seumalo posted three straight seasons with a 67.0 PFF grade, 68.0 run blocking grade and 63.0 pass protection grade with the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Injuries (seven games missed the last two years) and inconsistent pass protection (five sacks on a 4.4% pressure rate in Pittsburgh) may hamper his market.
37. Joey Bosa, EDGE
Age: 30.5
Joey Bosa was effective as a part-time pass rusher with the Buffalo Bills in 2025, generating 47 pressures and 5.0 sacks in 15 games played. Bosa can’t be trusted at this point as a run defender, but a heavy rotation did allow him to log at least 500 snaps played for the first time since 2021.
38. David Edwards, OG
Age: 28.8
David Edwards had a successful two-year stint as the starting left guard for the Buffalo Bills. He’s a dependable run blocker who struggles at times in protection (three sacks and 27 pressures allowed in 2025).
39. Jamel Dean, CB
Age: 29.3
Jamel Dean allowed his lowest passer rating against in 2025 (46.9) while generating a career-high three interceptions. He has 11 interceptions and 35 pass breakups in his career but will be turning 30 and has never played more than 15 games in a season in his seven-year career.
40. Kevin Zeitler, OG
Age: 35.9
Kevin Zeitler remains one of the most dependable guards in the NFL heading into his age-36 season. He’s allowed fewer than 20 pressures in four straight years, although he has seen an uptick in his sacks allowed (13).
41. Zion Johnson, OG
Age: 26.2
Zion Johnson has never lived up to his first-round billing, but he has four years of starting experience at both left guard (3,122 snaps) and right guard (1,185). He allowed the fewest sacks (3) and pressures (26) of his career in 2025 and could benefit from a change in scenery to an offense with more of a zone scheme.
42. Wan’Dale Robinson, WR
Age: 25.0
Wan’Dale Robinson had a career-year for the New York Giants in 2025, catching 92 of 131 passes for 1,014 yards and four touchdowns. It was his second straight year with at least 130 targets and 90-plus catches.
Robinson is mostly regarded as a slot receiver (74.9% career slot rate) but did play as an outside receiver a career-high 32.7% of the time in 2025. He was also utilized more down the field (8.5 average depth of target) in 2025. He has shown the ability to earn targets from the slot and has now shown he can play on the outside as well.
43. Dre’Mont Jones, EDGE
Age: 29.0
Dre’Mont Jones remains an effective, under-the-radar edge rusher. He has five straight seasons with at least 40 pressures and at least 4.0 sacks every year since 2020. Jones had an 11.7% pressure rate in nine games with the Baltimore Ravens after being traded away from the Tennessee Titans.
44. Chig Okonkwo, TE
Age: 26.4
Okonkwo is a versatile tight end who can make plays in the passing game with his athleticism. He averaged 75.3 targets, 54.0 receptions and 522.3 receiving yards with five touchdowns over the last three seasons on bad Tennessee Titans’ passing attacks. Okonkwo was tied for seventh among tight ends in yards per route run from the slot (1.9) in 2025.
Okonkwo is a poor blocker because of his small frame, but he has the speed and athleticism to generate mismatches. He could have continued to have fantasy value in the right landing spot.
45. Tyler Allgeier, RB
Age: 25.8
Tyler Allgeier has remained a reliable rusher while serving as a backup for Bijan Robinson with the Atlanta Falcons. Allgeier was a 1,000-yard rusher as a rookie and had a career-high eight touchdowns in 2025.
The veteran running back doesn’t offer much as a receiver, but he could be a perfect early-down rusher for a team looking to get a steady ball carrier and an above-average short-yardage back in the backfield. He could see his fantasy value increase significantly in the right landing spot.
46. Joel Bitonio, OG
Age: 34.3
Joel Bitonio has nine straight seasons with at least 1,000 snaps played, eight of which produced a PFF grade of 68.0 or higher. He is starting to slow down in pass protection with seven sacks and 95 pressures allowed over his last three seasons, but he should be considered a league-average starter at worst on the interior.
47. Alijah Vera-Tucker, OG
Age: 26.6
Injuries have derailed the promising career of Alijah Vera-Tucker. He missed all of 2025 with a triceps injury and played just 12 games in 2022 and 2023 combined. When healthy, he’s shown that he’s an above-average run blocker with the ability to be functional as a pass protector who can play both guard and tackle.
48. Kevin Byard III, S
Age: 32.4
In two seasons with the Chicago Bears, Byard produced 223 total tackles, nine tackles for loss, 2.0 sacks, 15 passes defended and eight interceptions (seven in 2025). He can still make a high-end impact on the backend for defenses that need a veteran presence.
49. Devin Bush, LB
Age: 27.5
Devin Bush thrived as the starting linebacker next to Carson Schwesinger in Cleveland in 2025. The veteran racked up 125 total tackles, seven tackles for loss, 2.0 sacks, two forced fumbles, a fumble recovery, eight passes defended, three interceptions and two touchdowns in 2025.
50. Nakobe Dean, LB
Age: 25.1
Nakobe Dean has struggled to stay healthy in his career but has shown the ability to be an impact off-ball linebacker when he’s on the field. Over the last two seasons, Dean has played in 25 of 34 games (23 starts), amassing 183 tackles (110 solo) with 7.0 sacks, 16 tackles for loss, three forced fumbles, five passes defended and an interception.
51. Aaron Rodgers, QB
Age: 42.1
Aaron Rodgers continues to play quarterback at an acceptable level after 21 years. Rodgers completed 65.7% of his passes in 2025, throwing for 3,322 yards, 24 touchdowns and seven interceptions in his first season with the Pittsburgh Steelers. If he chooses not to retire, he can still provide a respectable floor as an NFL signal caller.
However, for fantasy managers, there is little appeal to Rodgers at this stage in his career. Rodgers finished as the QB28 in points per game in 2025 (14.6) with just four top 10 finishes (one of which was in Week 18).
52. Jalen Thompson, S
Age: 27.5
Jalen Thompson is a versatile safety who has experience playing as a deep safety, slot corner and box defender. He has at least 95 total tackles and six passes defended in four of the last five seasons.
53. Jaquan Brisker, S
Age: 26.8
Jaquan Brisker has limitations in the pass game (11 touchdowns surrendered in four seasons) but is a reliable run stopper with the versatility to play deep or as a box defender. He has suffered multiple concussions (including one that cost him 12 games in 2024), so his value on the market could be suppressed.
54. Logan Hall, DL
Age: 25.7
Logan Hall set career-highs in pressures (42) and tackles (39) in 2025 and had a career-best 5.5 sacks in 2024. He is just entering his prime, but he never became more than a situational player during his time with Tampa Bay.
55. Jermaine Eluemunor, OT
Age: 31.1
Jermaine Eluemunor has been a solid right tackle the last two seasons with the Giants, logging over 900 snaps the last two seasons. He has four straight seasons with a 63.0 PFF grade despite allowing eight sacks and 48 pressures the last two seasons.
56. Leo Chenal, LB
Age: 25.2
A serious shoulder injury ended Leo Chenal’s season after just 14 games. He averaged 54.5 tackles per season with the Kansas City Chiefs but was never able to earn a full-time role on defense. 2025 was the first season he had a higher than a 41% snap share on defense.
57. Deebo Samuel, WR
Age: 30.0
The Washington Commanders traded for Deebo Samuel before the 2025 season, hoping they found a complement to Terry McLaurin in the passing attack. Samuel had a productive season (99 targets, 72 receptions, 727 receiving yards and five touchdowns), but he struggled to provide much playmaking after the catch.
Samuel is still a good player, but the explosion and dynamism that made him a weapon earlier in his career did not appear often on the field in 2025. Samuel posted career-lows in yards per reception (10.1), yards per target (7.3) and yards after catch (6.5). A good landing spot could push him into a flex-level player in 2026.
58. Kwity Paye, EDGE
Age: 27.2
Kwity Paye is a solid, all-around defensive end who is stout against the run and has flashes of pass-rushing ability. Paye has at least 28 pressures and 4.0 sacks in all five of his NFL seasons, but never truly developed the pass-rushing toolbox needed to justify his first-round draft capital.
59. David Onyemata, DL
Age: 33.2
David Onyemata hits free agency after three productive seasons with the Atlanta Falcons. Since 2023, he’s been a reliable run defender (157 total tackle with 81 stops) and provided push from the interior defensive line (74 pressures and 8.0 sacks).
60. Asante Samuel Jr., CB
Age: 26.3
A neck injury has limited Asante Samuel Jr. to just 456 snaps over the last two seasons with the Los Angeles Chargers and Pittsburgh Steelers. Samuel is undersized, but is a solid cornerback when healthy, racking up 28 pass breakups and seven interceptions on 1,940 career coverage snaps.
61. Ethan Pocic, OC/OG
Age: 30.5
Ethan Pocic hits free agency after a successful four-year run with the Cleveland Browns. During his time in Cleveland, he played at least 819 snaps per season and never finished with a PFF grade below 63.0.
62. Joseph Ossai, EDGE
Age: 25.8
Joseph Ossai was buried on the depth chart to start his career, but he has flashed some pass-rushing potential with more opportunities the last two seasons. Since 2024, Ossai has racked up 74 pressures and 10.0 sacks on 724 pass rush snaps. He also took a step as a run defender in 2025, logging a career high 21 stops.
63. Wyatt Teller, OG
Age: 31.2
Wyatt Teller is a solid guard who has logged at least 765 snaps played in five straight seasons. Teller is an experienced veteran who can provide push in the run game but has his limitations as a pass protector (22 sacks and 143 pressures allowed since 2020).
64. A.J. Epenesa, EDGE
Age: 27.4
A.J. Epenesa has never developed into more than a situational pass rusher with the Buffalo Bills, logging just one career season with more than 440 snaps played. From 2022 to 2024, he averaged 6.3 sacks per season, but had just 2.5 in 2025, splitting pass-rushing snaps with Joey Bosa and Greg Rousseau.
65. Sheldon Rankins, DL
Age: 31.8
Sheldon Rankins remains an underrated interior defensive lineman. Since 2021, Rankins has racked up at least 24.0 pressures and 3.0 sacks in four of five seasons, with the long exception being an injury-riddled 2024 season.
66. Rico Dowdle, RB
Age: 27.6
Rico Dowdle is one of five running backs with at least 1,000 rushing yards and 200 receiving yards in each of the last two seasons. The other four?
Bijan Robinson, Jahmyr Gibbs, Saquon Barkley and James Cook III.
Nobody is putting Dowdle in the same category as those four running backs, but he’s proven now (across two teams) that he is a good running back capable of moving the chains and busting big plays. If he finds a team to give him a consistent early down role, he could continue to be a flex play in fantasy in 2026 and beyond.
67. Kenneth Gainwell, RB
Age: 26.9
Kenneth Gainwell’s decision to sign with the Pittsburgh Steelers gave him a chance to showcase his ability. Gainwell set career-highs in every statistical category, handling 114 carries for 537 yards and five touchdowns while adding 73 receptions on 85 targets for 486 yards and three touchdowns on a 50% snap share.
Gainwell finished as the RB20 in PPR points per game (13.0) and raised his stock dramatically heading into free agency, coming off a one-year deal. He’s a capable rusher but could once again have an excellent floor as a pass catcher in 2026.
68. Christian Kirk, WR
Age: 29.2
Christian Kirk is a steady slot receiver who can operate as a safety blanket for quarterbacks thanks to his ability to get open quickly. Unfortunately, he has missed 16 games over the last three seasons due to hamstring, groin, and collarbone injuries.
69. DaQuan Jones, DT
Age: 34.1
DaQuan Jones posted four straight seasons of a 64.0 PFF grade (three of which were 72.0 or higher), 92 pressures and 10.0 sacks. He has struggled with injuries over the last three seasons but is a consistent interior pass rusher when on the field.
70. Dallas Goedert, TE
Age: 31.0
Dallas Goedert enters free agency coming off a strong season as a pass catcher, racking up 82 targets, 60 receptions, 591 receiving yards and 11 touchdowns. Goedert was 10th among tight ends in expected points added (36.12) as a receiver.
71. Dylan Parham, OG
Age: 26.4
Dylan Parham has logged over 900 snaps at right guard and 2,500 snaps at left guard since 2022. Parham has limitations in pass protection (6.0% career pressure rate and 18 sacks allowed), but he is a mauler in the run game for teams that run man/gap schemes.
72. Amik Robertson, CB
Age: 27.5
Amik Robertson is an undersized cornerback who has proven to have the ability to play either outside or in the slot in his career. Robertson has three straight seasons with at least 50 total tackles and 17 stops.
He’s generated 21 pass breakups and three interceptions during that time but has also allowed 11 touchdowns and a 95.1 passer rating against during that time.
73. Cor’Dale Flott, CB
Age: 24.4
Cor’Dale Flott took a big step as a coverage corner in 2025, logging a career-high eight pass breakups while allowing a 72.8 passer rating against. Flott has a lengthy injury history and has never played more than 14 games in a season, but he won’t turn 25 until the start of the 2026 season.
74. Brian Robinson Jr., RB
Age: 26.8
Robinson was effective in a limited role behind Christian McCaffrey in his lone season with the San Francisco 49ers, handling 92 carries for 400 yards and two touchdowns. The veteran running back has averaged 4.1 yards per carry in his career and averaged 190 carries, 776.3 rushing yards and 5.0 touchdowns during his first three professional seasons.
Robinson should have no problem finding a home on a team that is looking for a steady veteran to handle their early down carries. If he lands on a good offense that is able to move the ball he could find himself as a fantasy-relevant player with weekly touchdown upside.
75. Reed Blankenship, S
Age: 26.9
Reed Blankenship had a rough season in coverage, but he has generated 10 pass breakups and nine interceptions in his first four seasons. The veteran safety had three straight seasons of a 73.0 or higher PFF grade before a poor 2025 (46.5), thanks to issues in coverage.
76. J.K. Dobbins, RB
Age: 27.1
Dobbins once again suffered a significant lower-body injury, this time suffering a season-ending foot injury in Week 10. Before being injured, Dobbins was fifth in the NFL in rushing yards (772) and fourth in explosive runs (21).
The veteran running back once again showed enough to find a home in 2026, but fantasy managers need to make sure they have plenty of depth behind him, given his lengthy injury history.
77. Cobie Durant, CB
Age: 27.9
Cobie Durant was a solid contributor for the Los Angeles Rams over his career. He is capable of making plays in the pass game (16 pass breakups and seven interceptions in his career), but also can’t get beaten gambling in coverage (10 touchdowns surrendered, including five in 2025).
78. Malcolm Koonce, EDGE
Age: 27.6
Malcolm Koonce missed all of the 2024 season with a knee injury but bounced back nicely in 2025 with 35 pressures and 4.5 sacks on 331 pass-rushing snaps. His window to develop into a three-down defensive end is probably gone, but he is a solid situational pass rusher.
79. David Njoku, TE
Age: 29.5
The emergence of Harold Fannin Jr. and continued injury woes reduced David Njoku to a lesser role in 2025. The veteran tight end has his fewest targets (48), catches (33) and receiving yards (293) since 2020 despite catching four touchdowns.
Njoku has played more than 14 games just twice since 2019, but he can still be a weapon after the catch and in the red zone. A good landing spot will make him a late-round tight end worth taking a chance on in 2026.
80. Rob Havenstein, OT
Age: 33.7
Rob Havenstein continued to struggle with injuries in 2025, playing just 461 snaps for the Los Angeles Rams. The veteran tackle had a 73.0 or higher PFF grade in five straight seasons before 2025 but has missed 19 games in the last three seasons.
81. Rachaad White, RB
Age: 27.0
An injury to Bucky Irving gave Rachaad White one last chance to showcase himself before hitting free agency. White handled 132 carries for 572 yards and four touchdowns while adding 40 receptions on 45 targets for 218 yards, making eight starts.
The veteran running back has averaged 4.3 yards per carry the last two seasons but will get a serious look in free agency from teams looking to add a pass-catching dimension to their backfield. White averaged 57.5 targets, 51.3 receptions, and 362.5 receiving yards per season while scoring 11 touchdowns as a pass catcher.
82. Roger McCreary, CB
Age: 25.9
Roger McCreary is a respectable slot cornerback who has allowed just four touchdowns on 95 targets over the last two seasons. He has just one interception and one pass break up the last two years while being limited to 997 snaps due to injuries.
83. DJ Reader, DL
Age: 31.6
DJ Reader is still a dependable interior defensive lineman, even if his play has dipped over the last two years in Detroit. Reader generated just 20 pressures in 2024 and 2025, tied for the fewest in a healthy season since 2017.
84. Levi Onwuzurike, DL
Age: 27.9
Levi Onwuzurike missed the 2025 season with a torn ACL, the second season he has missed due to injury in his career. He had a strong 2024 season (45 pressures, 1.5 sacks and 18 stops), but the injury history caps his upside.
85. Cade Otton, TE
Age: 26.8
Cade Otton has quietly averaged 84 targets, 59 receptions and 586 receiving yards with five receiving touchdowns over the last two seasons.
Otton isn’t a high-end fantasy tight end, but he is good enough to be on the field and has streaming potential if he can find an offense where he can operate as the third option.
86. Travis Kelce, TE
Age: 36.3
Travis Kelce may not have the ability to break fantasy football anymore, but he’s been a solid floor tight end the last three seasons. Since 2022, Kelce has averaged 120.7 targets, 88.7 receptions and 886.0 receiving yards per season with 13 touchdowns. He has finished as a top-three scoring tight end in total points in nine of the last 10 years.
Many believed that 2025 would be his last season, but there is speculation that he could return once again in 2026. There is almost zero chance he will play for any team that isn’t the Chiefs, which once again gives him a solid fantasy floor.
87. Greg Newsome II, CB
Age: 25.7
Greg Newsome II started his career off strong, allowing an 87.3 passer rating with 24 pass breakups, two interceptions, and six touchdowns allowed. Over his last two seasons, he’s given up nine touchdowns while allowing a 113.9 passer rating against.
Newsome is at his best playing in the slot, but an 18.7% missed tackle rate has forced him to take on more of a role as an outside corner.
88. Alohi Gilman, S
Age: 28.3
Alohi Gilman was traded to the Baltimore Ravens from the Los Angeles Chargers after Week 5, which gave him an opportunity to play in the box (264 snaps) after spending most of his career at free safety. He responded with career-highs in tackles (90) and stops (17).
89. Kaden Elliss, LB
Age: 30.5
Kaden Elliss had three seasons of stuffing the stat sheet with the Atlanta Falcons, averaging 126.7 tackles, 75.3 solo tackles, 46.6 stops and 4.2 sacks per season. He isn’t great in coverage but still generated seven pass breakups and two interceptions with the Falcons.
90. Kyle Dugger, S
Age: 29.8
Kyle Dugger is more of a box safety who can make plays in the run game than a free safety. The veteran has 141 career stops in six seasons. He is a boom-or-bust gambler in coverage, generating 11 interceptions and 12 pass breakups while giving up 19 touchdowns in his career.
91. Jonah Williams, OT
Age: 28.2
Injuries limited Jonah Williams to just 935 snaps at right tackle in two seasons with the Arizona Cardinals. His limitations in pass protection (35 sacks and 175 pressures allowed in six seasons) make him hard to trust as a starter, but over 2,000 snaps at both left and right tackle make him an ideal swing tackle.
92. Alex Singleton, LB
Age: 32.1
Alex Singleton bounced back from an injury-plagued 2024 season to deliver another strong season as a run stopper in 2025. In three healthy seasons with Denver, Singleton averaged 158.3 tackles and 57.0 stops.
93. Germaine Pratt, LB
Age: 29.7
Germaine Pratt reunited with former defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo in Indianapolis after Week 5 and immediately made an impact. The veteran linebacker racked up 101 total tackles and 37 stops with the Colts while adding an interception and eight passes defended. Pratt has three straight seasons with 118 or more tackles.
94. Bobby Wagner, LB
Age: 35.6
2025 was Bobby Wagner’s 11th straight season with at least 900 snaps played and a PFF grade of 69.0 or higher. Wagner has taken a step back in coverage (career-low 52.3 PFF coverage grade), still produced 162 tackles, 52 stops, 4.5 sacks, eight tackles for loss and two interceptions in his age-35 season.
95. Demario Davis, LB
Age: 37.0
Like Bobby Wagner, Demario Davis continues to defy age. Davis has eight straight seasons with the New Orleans Saints, with over 875 snaps played and a PFF grade above 73.0. The veteran linebacker has averaged 119.3 tackles, 3.9 sacks and 9.8 tackles for loss in his eight years in New Orleans.
96. Josh Jobe, CB
Age: 27.8
Josh Jobe played well as a full-time outside cornerback with the Seattle Seahawks in 2025. Jobe allowed a career-best 75.2 passer rating against, generating nine pass breakups and an interception on 83 targets. He allowed just three touchdowns on the season.
97. Jadeveon Clowney, EDGE
Age: 32.9
Jadeveon Clowney had an impressive year as a situational pass rusher for the Dallas Cowboys, generating 8.5 sacks and 40 pressures on 227 pass rush snaps. Clowney has at least 40 pressures and 5.5 sacks in each of his last three seasons.
98. Andre Cisco, S
Age: 25.8
Andre Cisco has all the athletic tools to be an above-average safety, but tends to play out of position. He’s allowed 10 interceptions in his career and has a 14.2% career missed tackle rate. He also has 13 career pass breakups and eight interceptions with 38 career stops.
99. Cam Robinson, OT
Age: 30.3
Cam Robinson signed with the Houston Texans in the offseason but was traded to the Cleveland Browns after losing the starting tackle job to rookie Aireontae Ersery. Robinson started 12 games with the Browns at left tackle, surrendering eight sacks and 40 pressures on 472 protection snaps.
The veteran tackle has plenty of experience, but his recent struggles in pass protection (15 sacks and 92 pressures allowed the last two seasons) make him a depth piece and not a starter.
100. Najee Harris, RB
Age: 27.9
Najee Harris missed most of the summer with the Los Angeles Chargers due to an eye injury suffered in a fireworks accident. Harris was active for Week 1 but ultimately lasted just 15 carries before his season ended due to a torn Achilles tendon. He averaged 4.1 yards per carry.
Harris was one of the most reliable starters in the NFL during his first four seasons with Pittsburgh, but his age, workload, and the significance of his injury make him an easy fade in fantasy heading into 2026.