Superflex Dynasty
Rankings 2026
Complete Superflex dynasty rankings by position. Updated monthly.
About Superflex Dynasty Rankings
Superflex dynasty rankings exist because standard 1QB rankings badly undersell quarterback value the moment your league allows a second QB in the lineup. In a typical superflex dynasty league, two quarterbacks start every week instead of one, and that single roster rule reshapes the entire player pool. A dynasty superflex rankings list isn't just the same players reordered slightly, it's a fundamentally different hierarchy where elite quarterbacks climb past running backs and wide receivers who would otherwise sit above them in a 1QB format.
These superflex dynasty rankings cover every relevant position, sorted using the same trade values that power our calculator, just weighted for the format where QBs matter more. Whether you're prepping for a startup draft, evaluating a trade mid-season, or just curious how a player's stock changes between formats, this page gives you the superflex-specific view that a standard ranking list can't.
How Superflex Changes Player Value
The core mechanic behind superflex dynasty rankings is simple supply and demand. In a 1QB league, there are more startable quarterbacks than there are starting spots, so even good QBs carry modest dynasty value relative to elite skill players. In superflex, every team needs two, which doubles demand against a roughly fixed supply of quality starters. That scarcity is what drives quarterback values up by 20-40% (see exact values on our trade value chart) in most superflex dynasty trade calculator models, ours included.
This shift doesn't just affect quarterbacks directly, it changes everyone else's rank too. As QBs absorb a larger share of the total value in the format, the gap between the top non-QB assets and the rest of the player pool compresses slightly, since quarterbacks are now competing for the same finite "elite asset" slots at the top of the board. That's why a superflex dynasty rankings list often looks meaningfully different from a 1QB list even outside the quarterback position, not just at it.
If you're new to the format, the simplest way to use this page is to compare a player's rank here against their 1QB rank elsewhere on the site. A big gap between the two tells you exactly how format-dependent that player's value really is, which is useful information before you make or accept an offer.
Superflex Rookie Rankings: What to Know
Superflex rookie rankings deserve their own attention because rookie quarterbacks see the single biggest swing of any player type when moving from a 1QB to a superflex dynasty rookie rankings view. A rookie QB who might sit outside the top 10 of a 1QB rookie class can jump into top-five territory in superflex purely because of format-driven demand, even before he's proven anything on the field.
This matters most in superflex startup drafts and rookie-only drafts, where managers are often drafting QBs earlier than their actual on-field outlook might justify, simply because waiting means missing the position entirely. If you're building a superflex roster from scratch, treat quarterback as a draft-capital priority position rather than a "wait and see" pick, since the format punishes managers who fall behind at QB more severely than it punishes them at any other position.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between 1QB and superflex rankings?
1QB rankings assume only one quarterback starts per week, which limits how high any QB can rank regardless of talent. Superflex rankings assume two quarterbacks start, which significantly raises QB value across the board and reshuffles the overall player pool as a result.
How much does superflex increase quarterback value?
Quarterback values typically rise 20-40% in superflex compared to 1QB formats, since every team now needs two starting QBs instead of one, creating real scarcity at a position that's usually deep in standard formats.
Are these superflex rankings updated monthly?
Yes, superflex dynasty rankings update on the same monthly cycle as our standard rankings, reflecting performance, injuries, depth chart changes, and roster moves throughout the season.
Do superflex rookie rankings differ from standard rookie rankings?
Significantly, especially at quarterback. A rookie QB's superflex rookie ranking is often much higher than his 1QB rookie ranking, since draft-capital scarcity at the position outweighs his unproven NFL production in the eyes of superflex managers.
Should I use superflex rankings if my league only starts one QB?
No. Using superflex-weighted values in a 1QB league will significantly overrate your quarterbacks. Always match the ranking format to your actual league's starting requirements before making trade or draft decisions.