Dynasty Wheeling and Dealing in 2026 | Six Players to Buy & Sell NOW at Perceived Value

by Matty Kiwoom · Featured
Dynasty 2026 Buy & Sell Now

Between the NFL draft and training camp is a fantastic time to work the trade market in dynasty. Fantasy managers are operating on hopes, dreams, and (worst of all) their own predictions for how players will perform. Folks are using trade market value indicators to make decisions about their rosters, and that can create opportunities for savvy managers to strike and make moves that will not be completed later in the summer or heading into the season. Here are three players to buy low on and three players to sell while the consensus has locked in their value.

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Get ‘Em While They’re (Cold?)

Tua Tagovailoa | QB, Atlanta Falcons

Most market platforms say the same thing about Tua Tagovailoa: he is done and dusted. That may not be the case, though, which is why he is worth taking a low-risk chance on. The market has Tua ranked 32nd among signal callers in dynasty, which makes him extremely inexpensive in superflex formats. Last year, his accuracy metrics were still strong. He finished with a 67.7 completion percentage and 73.4 percent catchable pass rate, which reflects that he hasn’t completely lost his touch. Atlanta is in a better situation than Miami was by the end, with a head coach who has helped mid QBs find success and good weapons all around him. His dynasty value has cratered to the point where you can probably get him for $0.99 or less.

Mark Andrews | TE, Baltimore Ravens

Mark Andrews is younger than fantasy managers realize, and his analytical profile was down but better than his current TE19 price tag would suggest. He had a 17.2 percent target share last season that ranked 16th among all 143 tight ends in the league, and a 14.8 percent air yards share.

Those usage numbers belong to a guy who is very much still in the conversation, not one being phased out, and the dynasty market has him priced as if the injury history erased everything that came before it. He is still Lamar Jackson‘s first read in the red zone, still one of the most targeted tight ends in football, and available right now at a price that reflects fear rather than production. Buy the fear.

D.J. Moore | WR, Buffalo Bills

If you know me, you know that I will be in DJM’s corner until he hangs em’ up. As of now, it is still easy to wave the D.J. Moore flag, especially given his comical WR35 dynasty value. Moore finished 2025 as the WR35, and it was the least productive year in his career. Now he leaves a crowded offense to become all-world quarterback Josh Allen‘s primary target. The veteran wideout posted two fantasy points per target last year, and now he is projected to see up to 50 percent more targets than he did in Chicago in 2025. There probably isn’t a bunch of productive seasons still in front of Moore, but 2026 is going to be good for him, so it’s smart for fantasy managers to make the small investment if they want to win.

RELATED: Late-Round Sleepers 2026 | Five Go-Tos for Dynasty Startups & Redraft

Everybody Wants a Piece

Bhayshul Tuten | RB, Jacksonville Jaguars

Bhayshul Tuten is one of those players who sounds better than the tape has shown so far in his short career. Tuten finished 2025 with 307 rushing yards on 83 carries at 3.70 yards per carry, ranking 86th among running backs. He wasn’t the primary ball carrier, so volume isn’t in his favor. Let’s look at some analytic metrics. His true yards per carry of 3.68 ranked 84th, which is not the profile of a workhorse back waiting to break out.

Chris Rodriguez (one fumble in three years) is right there in the same backfield, posting better efficiency numbers on more carries, and the Jacksonville situation does not scream featured-back clarity for either of them. Move Tuten while the market is saying that he is top 24 back in dynasty.

Trevor Lawrence | QB, Jacksonville Jaguars

I promise, I am not purposefully picking on the Jags, but the market is too bullish on Jacksonville’s offense. Trevor Lawrence finished sixth in passing yards and eighth in pass EPA last season, which sounds like the case for keeping him, until you look at the numbers that actually predict sustainability. His 60.9 completion percentage ranked 50th among quarterbacks, his catchable pass rate of 65.7 sat 59th, and his 25 danger plays ranked ninth-most in the league, which is a big concern.

The Jacksonville supporting cast is not getting better; the offensive line concern is real, and dynasty managers who roster T-Law are evaluating him as a top-10 quarterback, when in reality that is the outlier on his profile. Use the tier-down approach to acquire a lower-value QB and add some extra assets; do not use “diamond hands” with Lawrence.

De’Von Achane | RB, Miami Dolphins

This one is genuinely hard to say out loud because De’Von Achane has been a fantasy monster. His stats last year were excellent. The former A&M Aggie finished with 1,350 rushing yards, a 19.8 percent target share, and 545 yards after contact. But the reason for selling is threefold. Firstly, he is valued as a top-five back, which means your return would be massive. Secondly, the offense has been stripped of talent, and the new quarterback’s profile doesn’t always translate into running-back production.

Lastly, opposing defenses will game plan to stop Achane every single week. He will be tasked with stacked boxes and defenders keying in on him all day long. Sometimes fantasy managers must make decisions that sting, and this is definitely one of those times.

Good for the Goose, Good for the Gander

It isn’t easy to operate objectively when it comes to dynasty trades. Players who have performed for the squad are tough to move on, especially if they have led to championships. Regardless of what players have done, managers have to move forward without strong connections because fantasy value can be had if done correctly. Whether the move is to buy into players who aren’t being properly valued or to move on from players who have a little too much inflation in their value, now is a great time to strike a deal.


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