Last updated: June 2, 2026 · 12 min read
A dynasty trade calculator is the single most useful tool a dynasty fantasy football manager owns. It estimates the fair-market value of every player and draft pick involved in a trade so you don't end up giving away a future Saquon for a current backup. This guide walks through how dynasty trade calculators actually work, how to read the values they output, and how to grade a trade in under a minute using Dynasty Blueprint's free six-source consensus.
If you'd rather just calculate a trade now, jump to the live calculator. It takes about 20 seconds.
Open the Trade CalculatorA dynasty trade calculator estimates the value of players and rookie draft picks in a multi-year fantasy football league. Unlike a redraft calculator — which only cares about this season's projected points — a dynasty calculator weighs future value heavily. A 23-year-old RB2 is often worth more than a 28-year-old RB1, because the younger player retains trade value across three or four more seasons.
The math is straightforward in principle: every player gets a single integer value (typically on a 0 to 10,000 scale), every draft pick gets a value, and you compare totals on each side. The hard part is figuring out what that integer should be. That's where the source data comes in.
Redraft values are projections for the current season. Dynasty values are a present-value calculation across the player's remaining career, discounted for age, injury risk, and depth-chart uncertainty. Three concrete differences:
Every dynasty trade calculator pulls from at least one of these sources. The biggest names in the space are:
| Source | Type | Update frequency | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| KTC | Crowdsourced "would you rather" votes | Real-time | Catching breakouts and busts fastest |
| FantasyCalc | Real trade analyzer submissions | Daily | What people actually accept |
| FantasyPros ECR | Expert consensus (100+ analysts) | Weekly | Industry-aligned valuations |
| DynastyDaddy | Community-driven algorithm | Daily | Slot-level pick precision |
| RosterAudit | Algorithmic dynasty values | Daily | Statistically conservative anchor |
Each source has a known bias. KTC tends to overreact to a single great game from a rookie. FantasyCalc tends to underprice aging stars because their owners hold them rather than trade them. FantasyPros tends to lag the market by 7 to 14 days.
That's why a consensus across sources is more accurate than any single source. Dynasty Blueprint averages KTC, FantasyCalc, FantasyPros, DynastyDaddy, RosterAudit, and RotoTrade. If five of six sources have a player at ~4,500 and the sixth has them at 6,000, the outlier gets washed out and you trade against the truth.
The most common mistake newcomers make in a Superflex league is using 1QB values for QBs. In a 1QB league, only the top 12 QBs are starter-quality, so QB2s through QB36 have minimal dynasty value. In Superflex — where you can start two QBs every week — the top 24 QBs are all startable, which dramatically inflates their values.
Rough rule of thumb for the QB premium in Superflex:
Every position other than QB gets a small discount in Superflex (typically 5 to 10 percent) because more roster spots go to QBs. Dynasty Blueprint handles this automatically — set your league to Superflex in the settings panel and every value on the site recomputes live.
Rookie draft picks are first-class assets in dynasty. A "2027 1st" can be the headline piece of a trade. Pick values are estimated the same way player values are — averaged across the same sources — but they're bucketed by year and tier:
| Tier | Slot range | Typical Superflex value (current year) |
|---|---|---|
| Early 1st | 1.01 – 1.04 | 5,500 – 7,500 |
| Mid 1st | 1.05 – 1.08 | 3,800 – 5,500 |
| Late 1st | 1.09 – 1.12 | 2,500 – 3,800 |
| Early 2nd | 2.01 – 2.04 | 1,400 – 2,000 |
| Mid 2nd | 2.05 – 2.08 | 900 – 1,400 |
| Late 2nd | 2.09 – 2.12 | 600 – 900 |
| 3rds | 3.01 – 3.12 | 200 – 600 |
| 4ths | 4.01 – 4.12 | 50 – 200 |
Two things to know about pick values that most calculators get wrong:
The full workflow in Dynasty Blueprint:
If you trade five low-value players for one star, the math says you should win the trade by raw value — but in practice, you almost never do. Why? Roster slots are scarce. Each of those five low-value pieces takes a roster spot that could be used on a better player from waivers. The "pieces" you receive in a trade have a real cost beyond their raw value.
Dynasty Blueprint applies a pieces tax: low-value assets (anything under 2,000 in adjusted value) get a 5 percent discount, capped at a 20 percent total reduction per side. Picks are exempt because they don't take roster spots until the draft.
The practical takeaway: condense before you trade. Three pieces for one is usually a fair structure. Five pieces for one almost always favors the team giving up the star.
If you trade a top-12 RB for a top-24 RB plus picks, you're tiering down. The partner getting the star should overpay — that's the trade premium for going up a tier. Industry consensus is 105 to 110 percent of the star's value, with the extra coming in picks or young depth.
Example: you're trading a 7,500-value RB. The partner should send you 7,875 to 8,250 in total value. If they're sending you a 5,000-value RB, they need to add 2,875 to 3,250 in picks — roughly an Early 1st plus a Mid 2nd.
Dynasty Blueprint's calculator generates these overpay packages automatically based on the partner's roster and pick capital.
The biggest reason to use a per-league dynasty trade calculator (rather than a generic one) is that your league's context changes the math. A rebuilder should be willing to overpay in picks; a contender should be willing to overpay in win-now players. A 12-team Superflex with TEP values rookie WRs differently than a 10-team 1QB PPR.
What a good Sleeper integration should pull:
Dynasty Blueprint does all five. Import your Sleeper league and the entire tool reconfigures around your specific context.
Honest comparison of the three most popular dynasty trade calculators:
| Feature | Dynasty Blueprint | KTC | FantasyCalc |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | Yes | Yes (Premium $) | Yes |
| Multi-source consensus | 6 sources | Own data only | Own data only |
| Superflex / 1QB / PPR / TEP | All four | Superflex, 1QB | Superflex, 1QB, TEP |
| Sleeper league import | Yes | Premium only | Yes |
| Trade finder (auto-suggest) | Yes | Premium only | Yes |
| Trade history (then-vs-now) | Yes | No | Limited |
| Team grader / power rankings | Yes | Premium only | Limited |
| Custom value weight blending | Yes | No | No |
| Pick floor (no depreciation) | Yes | No | No |
The simplest summary: KTC is best for catching real-time market moves, FantasyCalc is best for raw "would they accept this?" gut checks, and Dynasty Blueprint is best for league-specific decisions where multi-source consensus and a full Sleeper integration matter. Use all three if you want — they each have something to offer.
A tool that estimates fair-market value for every player and draft pick involved in a fantasy football trade. Unlike a redraft calculator, it weighs multi-year future value heavily.
No single source wins. KTC tracks crowd votes fastest, FantasyCalc reflects real trade data, FantasyPros aligns with expert consensus. Multi-source consensus beats any single source because the biases cancel out.
Top-12 Superflex QBs are worth roughly 1.8 to 2.4 times their 1QB value. Every other position gets a small discount (5 to 10 percent) in Superflex because more roster spots go to QBs.
Picks are valued like players in the consensus sources, bucketed by year and tier (Early 1st, Mid 1st, Late 1st, then 2nds, 3rds, 4ths). As the draft approaches, picks converge on their exact slot value.
Yes. The trade calculator, trade finder, team grader, draft pick values, power rankings, and trade history are all free with no signup required.
Yes — enter your league ID or username and Dynasty Blueprint pulls rosters, settings, transactions, and draft picks automatically.
Currently Dynasty Blueprint integrates with Sleeper only. You can still use the calculator for any league by manually setting the format (Superflex, PPR, TEP, league size) and dropping in players and picks.
Source values refresh daily. Weekly historical snapshots are persisted so the trade history view can show what each asset was worth on the day of the trade.
← Back to Dynasty Blueprint · Methodology · Privacy · Terms
Dynasty Blueprint is independent and not affiliated with KTC, FantasyCalc, FantasyPros, DynastyDaddy, RosterAudit, RotoTrade, or Sleeper.