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 QBs of interest, and providing a refresher on optimal trade strategy. The trade value chart for each position is linked below.
FANTASY FOOTBALL WEEK 12 TRADE VALUE CHART: QUARTERBACKS
Quarterback Riser – Brock Purdy (19-for-26, 200 yards, 3 TDs, 0 INT)
Purdy looked smooth against the Cardinals, in his first action back since week 4. He immediately enters the realm of a fringe QB1 rest-of-season and if he’s been your QB2, his return could mean packaging him or your QB1 to help bolster the rest of your roster for the playoff push.
Quarterback Faller – Justin Herbert (10-for-18, 81 yards, 0 TDs, 2 INT)
Hopefully Herbert got his typical Wild Card playoff-type performance out of the way for the season, but this was ugly. He’s a wily veteran now and continuing to have occasional games like this will make it harder to ever trust him a a top-6 fantasy QB despite all the talent and potential we’ve seen up to this point. In a position that is hard to make leaps in the top-12 of our ROS rankings, he drops three spots this week. On the flip side, if anyone has the bad O-line excuse, it is him.
Now introducing: Herbert Island. No other quarterback in the league is close to Justin Herbert in the pressure they have faced. Yet, Herbert just keeps on winning. pic.twitter.com/sHkTH2RSfs
— FleiAnalytics (@fleiAnalytics) November 13, 2025
Other Quarterbacks Of Interest – Josh Allen (19-for-30, 317 yards, 3 TDs, 2 INT, 6 rushes, 40 yards, 3 TDs)
Like Jonathan Taylor last week, this may be the week you can trade Josh Allen for a haul, or at least help get you there. Even while passing for over 300 yards and accounting for six total touchdowns, QBs generally hold the least positional trade value in 1QB redraft leagues. But, if you’re lacking in another area, and a league mate needs a QB, the urgency to make a move while fantasy trade deadlines loom near could mean it’s worthwhile to explore such avenues, even if it would hurt a little to lose Allen.
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, may be 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 12 TRADE VALUE CHART: QUARTERBACKS
| Rank | Player Name | Team | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1: Top QBs | |||
| 1 | Josh Allen | BUF | 867 |
| 2 | Lamar Jackson | BAL | 681 |
| 3 | Drake Maye | NE | 651 |
| 4 | Patrick Mahomes II | KC | 636 |
| 5 | Jalen Hurts | PHI | 629 |
| Tier 2: QB1 Options | |||
| 6 | Baker Mayfield | TB | 492 |
| 7 | Joe Burrow | CIN | 486 |
| 8 | Dak Prescott | DAL | 389 |
| 9 | Justin Herbert | LAC | 385 |
| 10 | Matthew Stafford | LAR | 362 |
| Tier 3: Fringe QB1s | |||
| 11 | Brock Purdy | SF | 322 |
| 12 | Jaxson Dart | NYG | 319 |
| 13 | Daniel Jones | IND | 307 |
| Tier 4: Backups | |||
| 14 | Caleb Williams | CHI | 277 |
| 15 | Jacoby Brissett | ARI | 274 |
| 16 | Jordan Love | GB | 233 |
| 17 | Jared Goff | DET | 229 |
| 18 | Bo Nix | DEN | 213 |
| 19 | Sam Darnold | SEA | 168 |
| 20 | Justin Fields | NYJ | 152 |
| 21 | J.J. McCarthy | MIN | 150 |






























