With the NFL Draft rapidly approaching, there’s still a lot of change coming to the fantasy football landscape. The key to winning dynasty deals is to trade for someone when their value is relatively low and send them away when their value is near or at its apex. With the league’s roster situation still in flux, you have the added dynamic of making speculative moves based on what you think might happen, which adds another fun layer of complexity.
That said, it can be tough to decide who you’re targeting and selling, considering the generally uncertain state of each team and player’s situation right now. Fortunately, our featured analysts have come to offer their suggestions on which trade candidates you’d be wise to buy or sell in dynasty fantasy football leagues. Check out our latest dynasty trade advice.
- 2025 NFL Draft Guide
- 2025 NFL Draft Scouting Reports
- 2025 NFL Mock Drafts
- Dynasty Mock Draft Simulator
Top Dynasty Trade Advice
Which player are you selling now in dynasty leagues and why? Also, what kind of return are you looking for?
Derrick Henry (RB – BAL)
“I’m selling Baltimore Ravens’ running back Derrick Henry in dynasty leagues. At 31 in 2025, Henry’s still a force, but his massive workload over the years signals a looming decline, especially in a dynasty format valuing youth. I’d cash out now while his name value and 2024 production keep his trade market high. I’m looking for a mid-to-late first-round 2025 pick or a young upside player like Jameson Williams, plus a second-round pick in return.”
– Aaron St Denis (Fantasy Sports Advice Network)
Josh Jacobs (RB – GB)
“Josh Jacobs is a great sell opportunity right now for dynasty league managers. Heading into his age 27 season, managers may think that there is more to come from Jacobs after logging an impressive 1,329 rushing yards with 15 scores last campaign. Yet, Jacobs has already logged 1,606 total carries in his career thus far and operated in a vacuum last season. There was no clear change-of-pace option behind him in the Green Bay offense, turning him into a volume monster. Green Bay ideally wants to run with multiple backs, making it unlikely Jacobs will log 300+ carries again in 2025. Anything that remotely equals a late 1st or early 2nd round pick would be enough to get that deal done.”
– Ed Birdsall (Talking Points Sports)
Courtland Sutton (WR – DEN)
“Courtland Sutton was the WR13 last year, averaging 11.8 half-point PPR fantasy points per game. However, he struggled to start the season, averaging 7.2 fantasy points per game over the first seven weeks, totaling two receiving touchdowns. By comparison, the veteran averaged 15 fantasy points per game over the final 11 weeks, totaling six receiving scores. Meanwhile, Sutton is heading into the final year of his contract. More importantly, the Denver Broncos have a couple of young wide receivers they have high hopes for in 2025 and could draft a wide receiver or tight end in the first round of the NFL Draft. I would happily take a late first-round or early second-round rookie pick for Sutton.”
– Mike Fanelli (FantasyPros)
Breece Hall (RB – NYJ)
“A lot of people have been talking about Breece Hall lately, which might make this a bad time to sell. However, if I can get good value for him before the NFL draft, I’m probably considering it. I’d love to sell him for another running back and a pick. Maybe something like James Cook and a second could get it done. If not, maybe you can use him to trade up in your draft, packaging him with an early second for an early first. I’m not selling low, but I’m fine moving on in the right situation.”
– Andrew Hall (FantasyPros)
“Breece Hall is still viewed by many analysts in the fantasy industry as an elite, bell cow RB, but as much as I like his talent, I think I’d get out of Dodge (Dodge City) before the bottom drops out. Hall’s torn ACL injury sidelined him in 2022. Last year, Hall and the Jets admitted to him suffering another knee injury, which limited his effectiveness. At this point, I value Hall more as a RBBC player instead of a rare bell cow. So for that reason, Ringo would try to trade Hall straight up for Jonathan Taylor or Ashton Jeanty, or include Hall and another player in a package deal for an upgrade at RB such as Saquon Barkley, Jahmyr Gibbs, or Bijan Robinson.”
– Mark Ringo (Sleepers and Busts)
George Pickens (WR – PIT)
“This isn’t exactly a novel idea, but selling George Pickens is probably a good move, even if it means selling low. Better to sell low than sell lower. Pickens has never been a consistent target earner. He’s terrific on contested catches, but that skill hasn’t produced big dividends in fantasy — Pickens has 12 TD catches in 48 career games. D.K. Metcalf has joined the Steelers and is probably going to out-target Pickens, taking away some of those high-value deep targets. And the Steelers still have a troublingly ambiguous QB situation. Chuba Hubbard for Pickens? Yes, please. George Kittle for Pickens? Sign me up. Any first-round rookie pick for Pickens? In a heartbeat.”
– Pat Fitzmaurice (FantasyPros)
Tyrone Tracy (RB – NYG)
“Tyrone Tracy is the low-hanging fruit worthy of picking here. With one of the best and deepest running back classes of recent memory incoming and Tracy’s fifth-round draft capital last year, his spot as the team’s lead back is anything but safe. Add in his five fumbles in 2024, and you have a recipe for dynasty value disaster brewing for 2025. I’d take a 2025 or 2026 second-round rookie pick to get him off my roster.”
– Derek Brown (FantasyPros)
Joe Milton (QB – DAL)
“The hype around Joe Milton got out of control. We got one game from Milton against a Buffalo team that was ready for the playoffs, and the extrapolation was lengthy. Milton is 25 years old, heading into his second season in the NFL after six years in college, where he surpassed 1200 passing yards once. Milton flashed some moments of value for fantasy football but the fact remains he’s a sixth-round rookie, who the Cowboys will sit firmly behind Dak Prescott, leaving him in no man’s land, selling him for a third-round pick now will likely help you win much sooner.”
– Tom Strachan (NFL Best Ball)
Subscribe: YouTube | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | iHeart | Castbox | Podcast Addict | TuneIn

