Dynasty Trade Values — January 1970

FantasyCalc dynasty values updated daily — the definitive trade value chart for MFL dynasty leagues

QBs
PPR
TEP
Teams
Published: January 1970Values sourced from FantasyCalc — updated dailyShowing top 300 dynasty players
Pos
RankPlayerPosTeamAgeValueTrend
No players match those filters.
Top 15 QBs
Top 15 RBs
Top 15 WRs
Top 15 TEs

30-Day Value Movers

Players whose dynasty value has changed most in the last 30 days

📈 Biggest Risers
No notable risers
📉 Biggest Fallers
No notable fallers

Dynasty Trade Values — January 1970

This dynasty trade value chart is updated daily using real trade data from FantasyCalc — one of the most trusted sources for dynasty player values. Toggle the format settings above to get values calibrated to your specific league: superflex, TEP, PPR, and team count all affect player values significantly.

How to Use This Trade Value Chart

Finding fair trade value

Look up both sides of any trade you're considering and compare the total values. A trade where Side A totals 8,400 and Side B totals 7,800 is slightly favorable to Side A — about a 600-point advantage. For quick trade math, use the Dynasty Trade Calculator which handles the addition automatically.

Understanding the tiers

The tier separators in the chart above show natural value breaks in the dynasty market. The gap between Elite tier and Franchise tier players is enormous — these are irreplaceable cornerstones. The gap between players ranked 80-120 is much smaller. Use the tiers to understand when you're paying up for a player and when you're getting reasonable value.

Reading the trend arrows

The trend arrow shows 30-day value movement. A rising player (▲) is getting more expensive in trade markets — either because of a new opportunity, strong recent performance, or increased manager demand. A falling player (▼) is losing value — potentially a sell signal. The Risers and Fallers section above highlights the biggest movers of the last 30 days.

Format matters more than most managers realize

The values in this chart adjust for your league's format. A quarterback worth 4,200 in a 1QB league might be worth 6,800 in superflex — an 80% difference. A tight end worth 3,100 in standard PPR might be worth 4,500 in a 1.75 TEP league. Always match your format settings before evaluating a trade.

Why Dynasty Trade Values Change

Dynasty trade values aren't static — they respond to real events:

Injuries: When a starter goes down, his handcuff's value rises immediately. When a player suffers a serious injury, his own value drops to reflect the recovery risk.

Depth chart changes: A receiver who goes from WR3 to WR1 on his team sees his dynasty value jump significantly. A running back who loses carries to a newly-signed veteran sees his value fall.

Trades and free agency: NFL roster moves directly affect dynasty values. A receiver traded to a pass-heavy offense rises; one traded to a run-first team falls.

Age curves: Dynasty values naturally decline as players age past their position's peak years. This decline is gradual and built into the long-term value calculations.

Rookie draft: After each NFL Draft, rookie values are established based on draft capital, landing spot, and projected role. These values stabilize over the first few weeks as managers digest depth chart information.

Using Trade Values for Buy Low / Sell High Opportunities

The best dynasty trades happen when you identify players whose value doesn't match their trajectory. A player with a falling trend who you believe has turned a corner is a buy — the market is discounting him but you see the correction coming. A player with a rising trend who you think has been over-hyped is a sell — you can capture the premium before the market corrects.

For a deeper framework on buying and selling in dynasty, see the Dynasty Trade Tips guide.

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