2025 Fantasy Football Week 11 Trade Value Chart: Tight Ends

Fantasy Football Championships are won with trades.

These fantasy football trade value charts are based on The Wolf’s Rest Of Season Rankings, who finished 2nd of 172 experts in FantasyPros’ Multi-Year Draft Rankings. These charts adjust values to account for positional need, assigning values based on a 1QB, 12-team, full PPR league, where quarterbacks are generally harder to trade due to a lack of positional need, unlike in Superflex leagues.

Each week throughout the season, these values will be altered to reflect the player’s value for the rest of the season. Be sure to tune back each week throughout the season. We’ll be adjusting the chart, discussing risers & fallers, and other TEs of interest, and providing a refresher on optimal trade strategy. The trade value chart for each position is linked below.

QB | RB | WR | TE

FANTASY FOOTBALL WEEK 11 TRADE VALUE CHART: TIGHT ENDS

Tight End Riser – Cade Otton (9-of-12 targets, 82 yards)

With Chris Godwin‘s return looming farther out than initially expected, Otton should have more opportunities to produce like this down the stretch, and as a result enters our fringe-TE1 territory with healthy potential for more spike weeks. For trade scenarios, this probably makes him hard to deal for, since many remember his 2024 midseason stretch when injuries hit the Bucs’ WR core, and he was the TE1 fantasy weeks 6-10.

Tight End Faller – Hunter Henry (1-of-4 targets for 9 yards)

Henry is falling out of season-long TE1-production territory, which he was only in because of a 2 TD, 11-target explosion in week 3. His schedule sees lighter matchups the next few weeks, but for a player who was already TD-dependent, the lack of production lately puts him in danger of even fringe TE1 territory for us.

Other Tight Ends Of Interest – Dalton Schultz (7-of-11 targets, 53 yards, 1TD)

Interesting that Schultz’ first TD of the season didn’t come until Davis Mills was the signal-caller for the Texans, but here we are. He’s now been at least the TE8 three of the last four weeks with at least 8 targets in those games and he’ll be impossible to ignore in the fantasy-contributor conversation if he keeps up this pace.

Trade Strategy Reminders

Aim To Fill Holes On Your Roster, And Your Trade Partner’s

In general, trade offers that clearly benefit both teams’ overall value, not just your own, will make a trade partner more cooperative. However, being mindful of depth concerns with all teams involved in a trade will only increase the chance of that cooperation. Be mindful not just of weak positional depth, but a surplus of positional depth, with all your league’s rosters. You might have a shortlist of players you’d love to be able to trade for, but if what you have to offer isn’t what your trade partner needs, your offers will likely fall on deaf ears. Say you’re weak at RB, and have a surplus at WR. Teams that are strong at RB, but weak at WR, are naturally more eager to haggle.

Never Mention The Words “But The Trade Calculator Says”

Charts and calculators are a reference that can help find ideal trades, but they’re not gospel, and trying to make your potential trade partner think otherwise could shut the door on negotiations real quick. Even if your charts/calculators show the trade offer to be in your league mate’s favor, they probably have tools and references of their own, and the next time “But the trade calculator says” changes someone’s mind, maybe the first time.

Be Careful How Low-Ball Your Offers Are

Speaking of bad faith, a trade offer that is too clearly in your favor puts you in danger of potential trade partners shutting you out not just for that particular trade negotiation, but any future ones as well. It’s a great feeling to get those kinds of lopsided trade deals, but the ones that are so bad they only go through 1 percent of the time likely aren’t worth hitting the send button to begin with. At their core, fantasy players aren’t complete masochists; they just want to have fun with it, and somebody sending them insulting offers isn’t fun.

WEEK 11 TRADE VALUE CHART: TIGHT ENDS

QB | RB | WR | TE

RankPlayer NameTeamValue
Tier 1: Top TEs
1Trey McBrideARI1117
2Brock BowersLV1103
3Tyler WarrenIND976
4George KittleSF964
Tier 2: TE1 Options
5Oronde Gadsden IILAC638
6Jake FergusonDAL578
7Sam LaPortaDET571
8Dallas GoedertPHI511
9Dalton KincaidBUF479
10Travis KelceKC435
Tier 3: The Rest
11Colston LovelandCHI368
12Hunter HenryNE365
13Kyle Pitts Sr.ATL362
14Cade OttonTB311
15Harold Fannin Jr.CLE308
16Mark AndrewsBAL295
17Zach ErtzWAS291
18Juwan JohnsonNO261
19Dalton SchultzHOU258
20Theo JohnsonNYG254

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