Fantasy football tips 2025-26: Best picks, captaincy choices and transfer strategy
Fantasy Premier League success comes from picking the right players at the right time, not just choosing the most expensive names. Here are the strategies and specific tips that make the difference in 2025-26.
Fantasy Premier League (FPL) is the world's most popular fantasy sports game — over 10 million managers compete each season. The difference between the top 1% and the average manager is usually not luck. It is structure, process and the discipline to stick with good decisions even when they temporarily go wrong.
How FPL scoring works (quick recap)
Players earn points for: goals scored, assists, clean sheets (goalkeepers and defenders), saves (GKs), bonus points (awarded to the best performers in each match), and penalty saves. Points are deducted for yellow cards, red cards, goals conceded (GKs/DEF), and own goals.
Captaincy doubles a player's points for the week — the single most important decision you make each gameweek.
The core strategy principles
Differential vs template: The "template" team contains the most-owned players — if they all score, you keep up with the field. "Differentials" are low-ownership players who can pull you past your competitors when they score big. The best FPL seasons typically use a template base with 2–3 well-chosen differentials.
Form vs fixture: A player in excellent form against a tough fixture vs a player in poor form against an easy fixture — which do you choose? The answer is almost always: great form beats great fixture in the short term (3–4 weeks), but fixture analysis dominates over a full season.
Price changes: Player prices rise when many managers buy them and fall when they sell. Buying players before their price rises (and selling before they fall) adds squad value that competes with high-scoring alternatives.
Chip strategy: FPL provides four chips — Wildcard (x2), Free Hit, Bench Boost and Triple Captain. The most effective chip strategies deploy Bench Boost during a double gameweek and Triple Captain on the highest-scoring captaincy opportunity of the season.
Best budget defenders in 2025-26
The value defender principle: A significant portion of your squad value should be in attack. Spending £4.0–5.0m on defenders who also take set pieces, score goals or have exceptional clean sheet potential frees budget for expensive forwards.
Look for defenders from teams with: - Strong defensive records (fewest goals conceded) - Attacking full-backs who provide offensive returns regardless of clean sheet - Set-piece takers — corners and free-kick specialists earn bonus points
Captaincy strategy
The captain pick is the single highest-leverage decision in FPL. A blank captain costs you nothing. A double-scoring captain (goal, assist, clean sheet) versus your rivals can gain 10+ points on a gameweek.
Captaincy principles: - Home fixtures against weak defences are premium captaincy opportunities - Players on penalty duty receive an automatic +6 if penalties are scored — prioritise penalty takers - Fixtures with high xG for the captain's team increase expected returns - The "captaincy differential" — choosing a low-owned captain who outscores the template captain — is the single highest-risk, highest-reward move in FPL
Transfer strategy by season phase
Gameweeks 1–10 (early season): Price rises are aggressive in the opening weeks. Buy in-form players early to gain value. Wildcards should be saved.
Gameweeks 11–25 (mid-season): Use your first Wildcard after the international break to reset the squad around double gameweek targets and injury-hit positions.
Gameweeks 26–35 (run-in): Fixture analysis becomes critical. Blank gameweeks (teams in cup semi-finals may have a weekend free) must be planned around. Double gameweek planning peaks.
Gameweeks 36–38 (endgame): Final Wildcard and Free Hit deployment for double gameweeks if available. Bench Boost in a double gameweek with 11 active players is the optimal chip use.
The bench: Often underrated
The bench provides insurance against blank gameweeks and late injuries. A £4.0m backup goalkeeper who plays costs nothing to start the season; a blank bench in a double gameweek costs points.
Best bench strategy: one premium GK who plays every week, and three outfield players with high probability of featuring, costing as little as possible.
Common mistakes to avoid
Chasing last week's scores: The player who scored a hat-trick last week is often over-priced and faces tougher fixtures next week. Buy form early, not after it has been priced in.
Excessive transfers: Each transfer beyond your free transfer costs 4 points. Panic-buying two players after a bad gameweek costs 4 points before they play a single minute.
Ignoring ownership: If 50% of managers own a player and he blanks, you lose nothing on your rivals. If 5% own a player and he blanks, you gain on 95% of managers.
Captain volatility: Captaining high-variance players (wingers who might score a hat-trick or nothing) is appropriate as a differential. But captaining consistently reliable high-scorers (premium midfielders with penalty duties) should be your default.
Frequently Asked Questions
When should I use my Wildcard?** Most experienced FPL managers use their first Wildcard after the first international break (around GW7–9) once form and injuries are clearer. The second Wildcard is best saved for the final push in the last third of the season.
How important is budget allocation?** Very. The optimal budget split is roughly: 15–18% on GKs, 30–35% on defenders, 35–40% on midfielders, 15–20% on forwards. Adjust based on which positions offer the best premium value.
Should I have three premium players or more budget options?** In the current FPL meta, two premium midfielders plus one premium forward or vice versa is optimal. Three premiums in the same position limits budget elsewhere.
Is it worth paying for FPL statistics sites?** Free services (FPL Review, Fantasy Football Scout free tier) provide significant value. Paid tiers offer additional modelling tools — useful for very serious managers but not necessary for most.
James Caldwell is a transfer market reporter who has covered European football for fifteen years.