2026 NFL Bye Weeks For Fantasy Football: Welcome to Week 11 Byemageddon

2026 NFL Bye Weeks For Fantasy Football: Welcome to Week 11 Byemageddon

Keep track of every bye week of the 2026 NFL season, along with a list of fantasy-relevant players who will miss each week.

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We’ve had the who. We’ve had the where. Now we finally have the when.

The NFL schedule release means fantasy football draft season officially has another layer. Depth charts, camp buzz, injury recoveries and strength of schedule are all important. But once your draft gets rolling, bye weeks can quietly become the difference between surviving the season and punting away multiple matchups by October.

The byes run from Week 5 through Week 14, though the heavy damage comes between Weeks 6 and 11. And that doesn’t even account for the growing collection of mini-byes tied to the league’s bloated primetime schedule.

Using Fantasy Life's top-100 consensus fantasy football rankings from the great Kendall Valenzuela, Matthew Freedman, Dwain McFarland and Ian Hartitz, let’s identify the weeks most likely to wreck fantasy rosters—and how to draft around them.

NFL Bye Week Schedules, Key Absences And Takeaways 

Week 5: Carolina Panthers, Kansas City Chiefs

Week 5 feels awfully early for Kansas City to disappear from fantasy lineups, but there’s a silver lining. Mahomes gets an early breather while continuing to work back from knee surgery, and fantasy managers won’t have to navigate a late-season Chiefs break during the playoff push.

From a draft standpoint, this week won’t scare anyone. Travis Kelce (116) failed to crack our top six tiers in what seems increasingly like a farewell-tour season, and only diehard Panthers fans will overload on pieces from Carolina.

This is more inconvenience than catastrophe.

Week 6: Cincinnati Bengals, Detroit Lions, Miami Dolphins, Minnesota Vikings

Now we’re talking.

Four top-10 fantasy players gone in the same week is brutal enough. The fact that many fantasy managers will naturally stack these offenses makes it even worse.

Detroit and Cincinnati are especially dangerous from a bye-week perspective. It’s easy to leave drafts with combinations involving Jared Goff (121)/Gibbs/St. Brown/Williams/LaPorta or Burrow/Chase/Higgins/Brown.

That’s the kind of build that can accidentally surrender Week 6 before lineups even lock.

The good news? Receiver depth is still king in modern fantasy football. If you’re hammering elite WRs early, you should already be drafting with enough bench insulation to survive one ugly week.

And, honestly, if someone lets you start a draft with Gibbs and Jefferson, thank your leaguemates for panicking over Minnesota’s quarterback situation.

Week 7: Buffalo Bills, Jacksonville Jaguars, Los Angeles Chargers, Washington Commanders

There are recognizable names here, but this week feels more manageable than scary. 

Allen is obviously the headliner, though the quarterback position remains deep enough that streaming can cover the damage in a favorable matchup. The real concern is if you aggressively stack any of these offenses. You could wind up with a thin lineup fast.

And that’s without mentioning Dalton Kincaid (113) and Oronde Gadsden (127), a pair of tight ends capable of ceiling showings at any point.

Still, compared to the chaos coming later, Week 7 is survivable.

Week 8: Houston Texans, New Orleans Saints, New York Giants, San Francisco 49ers

This week carries sneaky volatility because so many featured players come with injury baggage.

McCaffrey’s health is annually in the conversation. Nabers and Skattebo are returning from season-ending injuries. Purdy, Collins, Olave and Evans don’t exactly inspire long-term durability confidence.

It’s also a week where there are some premier pass catchers, but their QBs are far from exceptional.  

Week 9: Pittsburgh Steelers, Tennessee Titans

Take a deep breath.

Week 9 is basically the fantasy calendar giving everyone a free square. Two teams. Minimal high-octane talent. Almost no reason to factor this into your draft strategy at all.

Move along.

Week 10: Chicago Bears, Denver Broncos, Philadelphia Eagles, Tampa Bay Buccaneers

This is where things start getting ugly again.

Week 10 features sheer volume. Nearly one-fifth of the Top 100 disappears, and while the elite-end talent isn’t quite as devastating as Week 11, the overall depth hit is enormous.

You could realistically lose your QB1, two starting RBs, three receivers, and your tight end all in the same week, depending on roster construction.

The Eagles and Bears are especially tricky because they’re prime stacking offenses. Hurts/Barkley/Smith/Dallas Goedert (124). Williams/Odunze/Loveland/Burden/Swift. Add Broncos breakout candidates with Bo Nix (102) or Buccaneers pass catchers paired with Baker Mayfield (122) and suddenly your bench is getting stress-tested in a hurry.

One caveat: Brown may be taking his talents to Week 11, if Philadelphia eventually deals him to New England after June 1, as many around the league expect.

Week 11: Atlanta Falcons, Cleveland Browns, Green Bay Packers, Los Angeles Rams, New England Patriots, Seattle Seahawks

Welcome to Byemageddon.

If Week 10 is about quantity, Week 11 is about star power.

Three top-five overall players vanish, and five of the top 25. Multiple WR1s disappear. Running back depth gets squeezed hard. Tight end becomes a wasteland.

And if Brown lands in New England? This week somehow gets even worse.

The tricky part is balance. Unlike some bye clusters that overload one position, Week 11 spreads the pain everywhere with elite RBs and WRs, depth at QB and multiple relevant TEs. 

You can’t simply “draft around” this one. The best approach is to make sure your middle rounds emphasize flexibility and depth rather than chasing fragile stacks.

Also worth noting: reigning league MVP Matthew Stafford (111) and Jordan Love (117) missed the Top 100, but absolutely matter here in superflex and deeper formats.

Week 12: Nobody

The NFL wisely decided America shouldn’t suffer bye weeks on Thanksgiving week. We’re thankful.

Week 13: Baltimore Ravens, Indianapolis Colts, Las Vegas Raiders, New York Jets

This week is all about running backs. 

Taylor. Jeanty. Henry. Hall.

That’s an absurd amount of RB firepower sidelined simultaneously, and it creates a major roster-construction warning: don’t overload this grouping during your draft.

Because if two of those backs are carrying your team into November, Week 13 suddenly becomes survival mode.

Bowers also headlines a surprisingly deep tight end week once you include Mark Andrews (119).

Week 14: Arizona Cardinals, Dallas Cowboys

This is the stress week. 

By Week 14, fantasy managers are either fighting for playoff positioning, battling to get in, or desperately trying not to collapse entirely.

And this bye week removes several high-ceiling fantasy options at exactly the wrong time.

The uncertainty adds another wrinkle. Will Prescott stay healthy? Will Arizona’s offense actually maximize all its weapons? Will Love live up to the hype?

Lamb and McBride are still absolutely worth drafting aggressively. Just maybe avoid pairing them together.

One More Bye Week Betting Angle … 

For anyone investing in team totals or futures markets, it’s worth knowing how clubs fare after an international game. We have a record (unnecessary) nine overseas contests involving 16 teams.

Only the Jaguars (London), Saints (Paris), and Patriots (Munich) elected to take their bye week immediately afterward.

Historically, teams returning stateside without a bye are 27-21 in their next game. Teams that choose rest? Surprisingly, just 36-39-1. 

Sometimes momentum matters more than recovery.


Players Mentioned in this Article

  1. Patrick Mahomes
    PatrickMahomesQ
    QBKCKC
    PPG
    20.4
    Proj
    283.6
  2. Kenneth Walker
    KennethWalker
    RBKCKC
    PPG
    12.2
    Proj
    229.5
  3. Chuba Hubbard
    ChubaHubbard
    RBCARCAR
    PPG
    8.1
    Proj
    158.4
  4. Rashee Rice
    RasheeRice
    WRKCKC
    PPG
    14.7
    Proj
    224.7

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