
George Kittle Fantasy Football Outlook For 2026: An Elite Stash For The Playoff Run
Pete Overzet breaks down why George Kittle is a rare elite veteran breakout candidate for 2026 fantasy football.
We've gone around the horn with Ian's breakdown of why Chase Brown is a league-winning RB for 2026, Dwain on why his WR pick in the same category is Luther Burden and Kendall's claim that the QB league winner will be Jaxson Dart.
That leaves one position remaining—tight end—and my pick is easy. It's veteran TE George Kittle, who's in a prime position to be a veteran breakout in 2026.
RELATED: 2026 Fantasy Football Rankings
George Kittle 2026 Fantasy Football Outlook
How can one of the greatest tight ends of this generation be considered a breakout candidate? Great question. You might think I'm cheating here, but let me explain …
There are only a few difference makers at the TE position. Heading into 2026, that short list includes Trey McBride, Brock Bowers and Colston Loveland. As post-breakout guys, you'll have to pay up for their services.
If we are hunting for cheap breakouts at the position, they usually come from the rookie cohort. Think Sam LaPorta a few years ago or even Harold Fannin last year.
I could certainly write up a guy like Kenyon Sadiq, but I find the case for George Kittle more compelling.
The argument is twofold: 1.) He's the cheapest he's ever been in drafts, and 2.) He's had six seasons where he's finished as the TE4 or better.
There's no need to do any guesswork with rookies when Kittle is there for the taking in the double-digit rounds. Outside of the three other Elite TEs I mentioned above, Kittle is the one other guy in the player pool we definitely know produces as an elite TE.
Ok, so now for the elephant in the room …
He's the cheapest he's ever been because he tore his Achilles in the Wild Card round. Yes, he will almost certainly miss the start of the season, but I'm here to assure you that it's not that big of a deal for our purposes. The most important weeks are the fantasy playoffs.
If we want to build a juggernaut starting lineup that can bulldoze its way through the fantasy playoffs, then an Elite TE is a key ingredient because of how much they can separate from the rest of the position. Normally, we have to pay up for this positional advantage, but the Kittle injury discount is providing a rare opportunity to sneak a late-season hammer onto your roster at sleeper prices.
And because tight end is the lowest-scoring position, you can easily survive the early part of the season without Kittle.
My suggestion is to draft Kittle alongside another cheap, reliable TE. Think guys like Dalton Schultz or Hunter Henry. Let one of those types serve as a chaperone for Kittle until he's ready to go.
Then, when Kittle returns to action in November or December—and I honestly won't be surprised if it's on the early side with what a physical freak Kittle is—you will be able to supercharge your starting lineup for the fantasy playoffs (aka the money weeks) with an elite TE at bargain-bin prices.
Don't get caught thinking of Kittle as a "dead roster spot." It's quite the opposite; he's the skeleton key to unlocking a superteam in the fantasy playoffs.

