Is George Kittle A League-Winning Click In Fantasy Football 2026?

Is George Kittle A League-Winning Click In Fantasy Football 2026?

Ian Hartitz breaks down what to make of George Kittle for the 2026 fantasy football season.

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After a season-ending Achilles tear last year, George Kittle is checking in as a late-round gem as long as his return-to-play timeline that's been floated around holds up. Ian Hartitz dives into what to expect from Kittle in his return season for fantasy football as part of his 2026 San Francisco 49ers Team Preview.

What Is George Kittle's Timeline For Return?

Some updates:

  • January 19: Kittle himself noted, “I had a clean tear. They didn’t have to drill into my heel. And where the repair was was where there’s more blood flow. So it takes some time off the recovery time.”
  • March 17: Dr. Jeff Mueller (fantastic Twitter follow) notes that Kittle is slightly ahead of schedule in an accelerated SpeedBridge Achilles repair protocol. His return-to-play timeline realistically lines up with Week 1.
  • March 29: GM John Lynch says the 49ers are "hopeful" Kittle will be back for Week 1.
  • April 27: Kittle again provides his own update, noting: "I think I’m ahead of schedule. My surgeon is super happy with it. So we’re on track to play a lot of football next season.”
  • April 30: Head coach Kyle Shanahan said Kittle is shooting to return in Week 1.

Basically, learned doctors, 49ers management and Kittle himself all seem to agree that Week 1 is on the table. Now, it'd make sense if the team is cautious with getting him to debut in Australia, and the PUP list is certainly on the table, but at a minimum, we should expect one of the game's best tight ends to be back on the field before too long once the season gets going.

George Kittle's 2026 Fantasy Football Upside

Of course, Kittle (33 in October) could be a shell of his former self, but here's the good news: This injury risk seems to be baked into his lowly TE9 (pick 117.3) ADP. There are tons of even later-round guys like Brenton Strange, Hunter Henry, Juwan Johnson, and TJ Hockenson capable of getting your team through the first few weeks of the season if necessary. Kittle is a priority late-round pick at the position—ESPECIALLY in leagues that feature an IR spot.

Also note: But if Kittle does miss time? Enter: Jake Tonges, who was the main beneficiary during Kittle's absence last season. Overall, he worked as the TE9 in total PPR points in Weeks 1-6 with Kittle sidelined before tacking on additional solid 7-60-1 and 5-59-0 receiving lines in Week 17 and in the Divisional Round in two additional spot starts. It's unlikely Tonges climbs up into draftable territory, but he could certainly (again) be a streamer-friendly option at the position during September.


Players Mentioned in this Article

  1. George Kittle
    GeorgeKittleQ
    TESFSF
    PPG
    11.2
    Proj
    123.1

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