Week 11 of the fantasy football season has arrived, and it’s more important than ever to know which players deserve a place in your starting lineup. Considering player talent, recent form, and matchups, we’ve put together our PFSN consensus Week 11 WR rankings.
These rankings were last updated at 8:00 AM ET on Sunday, November 16, 2025.
Week 11 WR Fantasy Rankings
1) Jaxon Smith-Njigba | Seattle Seahawks (at LAR)
2) Puka Nacua | Los Angeles Rams (vs. SEA)
3) Ja’Marr Chase | Cincinnati Bengals (at PIT)
4) CeeDee Lamb | Dallas Cowboys (at LV)
5) Drake London | Atlanta Falcons (vs. CAR)
6) Amon-Ra St. Brown | Detroit Lions (at PHI)
7) Nico Collins | Houston Texans (at TEN)
8) Rashee Rice | Kansas City Chiefs (at DEN)
9) Justin Jefferson | Minnesota Vikings (vs. CHI)
10) Emeka Egbuka | Tampa Bay Buccaneers (at BUF)
11) Jaylen Waddle | Miami Dolphins (vs. WAS)
12) George Pickens | Dallas Cowboys (at LV)
13) Davante Adams | Los Angeles Rams (vs. SEA)
14) A.J. Brown | Philadelphia Eagles (vs. DET)
15) Ladd McConkey | Los Angeles Chargers (at JAX)
16) Tee Higgins | Cincinnati Bengals (at PIT)
17) Zay Flowers | Baltimore Ravens (at CLE)
18) Stefon Diggs | New England Patriots (vs. NYJ)
19) Rome Odunze | Chicago Bears (at MIN)
20) DK Metcalf | Pittsburgh Steelers (vs. CIN)
21) DeVonta Smith | Philadelphia Eagles (vs. DET)
22) Jauan Jennings | San Francisco 49ers (at ARI)
23) Deebo Samuel Sr. | Washington Commanders (at MIA)
24) Jameson Williams | Detroit Lions (at PHI)
25) Romeo Doubs | Green Bay Packers (at NYG)
26) Jordan Addison | Minnesota Vikings (vs. CHI)
27) Quentin Johnston | Los Angeles Chargers (at JAX)
28) Courtland Sutton | Denver Broncos (vs. KC)
29) Tetairoa McMillan | Carolina Panthers (at ATL)
30) Khalil Shakir | Buffalo Bills (vs. TB)
31) Wan’Dale Robinson | New York Giants (vs. GB)
32) Troy Franklin | Denver Broncos (vs. KC)
33) Brian Thomas Jr. | Jacksonville Jaguars (vs. LAC)
34) Parker Washington | Jacksonville Jaguars (vs. LAC)
35) Tez Johnson | Tampa Bay Buccaneers (at BUF)
36) Tre Tucker | Las Vegas Raiders (vs. DAL)
37) DJ Moore | Chicago Bears (at MIN)
38) Ricky Pearsall | San Francisco 49ers (at ARI)
39) Xavier Worthy | Kansas City Chiefs (at DEN)
40) Christian Watson | Green Bay Packers (at NYG)
41) Keenan Allen | Los Angeles Chargers (at JAX)
42) Jerry Jeudy | Cleveland Browns (vs. BAL)
43) Jakobi Meyers | Jacksonville Jaguars (vs. LAC)
44) Keon Coleman | Buffalo Bills (vs. TB)
45) Rashid Shaheed | Seattle Seahawks (at LAR)
46) Mack Hollins | New England Patriots (vs. NYJ)
47) Calvin Ridley | Tennessee Titans (vs. HOU)
48) Olamide Zaccheaus | Chicago Bears (at MIN)
49) Cooper Kupp | Seattle Seahawks (at LAR)
50) Malik Washington | Miami Dolphins (vs. WAS)
Michael Pittman, WR, Indianapolis Colts
Those who have benefited from Michael Pittman’s re-emergence this season are unlikely to bite too hard on his Week 10 disappearing act, but it’s worth a shot. Pittman was targeted just twice in Berlin, catching both targets for 19 yards, as Jonathan Taylor dominated the Atlanta Falcons on the ground.
Pittman was the WR10 in FPPG (fantasy point per game) over the opening nine weeks of the season, and averaged 10 targets per game in Weeks 7-9. However, while some players’ reputations can survive a bad week or two, Pittman’s 10th-round preseason ADP tells you that he is not one of them.
Any intelligent fantasy manager will want to hold onto Pittman, but it’s more difficult to ignore such a miserable week at this stage of the season. If you can get the star receiver for mid-to-low-end WR2 value, you should pick him up this week.
Jakobi Meyers, WR, Jacksonville Jaguars
Fantasy managers could be forgiven for expecting more from Jakobi Meyers’ Jacksonville Jaguars debut. The former Las Vegas Raider joined a Jaguars offense that was missing its two top wide receivers through injury.
But rather than take over a leading role from the off, Meyers was tied for third on the team in targets against the Houston Texans on Sunday. Parker Washington assumed the team’s WR1 role, leading the Jaguars with seven targets.
However, it’s worth remembering that Meyers had only spent a few days in Jacksonville, including travelling to Houston for the game. Meyers wasn’t signed to play a minimal part in the offense, and should see his opportunities grow from Week 11 on.
If you can get Meyers for flex value this week, he should prove a great addition to your lineup.
Tetairoa McMillan | CAR (at ATL)
A late add to the Week 10 injury report with a hamstring injury wasn’t ideal. Still, Tetairoa McMillan played through the inconvenience and posted a target share north of 30% for the third consecutive week.
A large piece of cake is only tasty if the cake is any good in the first place, and that’s not where this Bryce Young offense settles. The elite target share has yielded just two top-20 weeks for McMillan, a hit rate unlikely to change moving forward given this offense’s limitations.
If Carolina is competitive, they are running the ball at a high rate, and if not, the offense isn’t staying on the field long enough for its WR1 to project well.
Atlanta’s defense has come on tough times of late (three straight games where an opposing WR has scored 18+ PPR points against them) and that’s enough to keep McMillan at the back end of your starting lineup. Still, you’re playing him with the understanding that the floor is lower than receivers in a similar range (i.e., Wan’Dale Robinson and Khail Shakir).
Jaylen Waddle | MIA (vs WAS)
Jaylen Waddle has made himself one of the most consistent fantasy assets at the position following the Tyreek Hill season-ending injury, and a struggling Commanders secondary doesn’t exactly profile as the type of unit to slow him down.
Ja’Marr Chase and Jaxon Smith-Njigba.
That’s the entire list of players riding a longer streak of games with 80+ receiving yards than Waddle (three), and he’s actually done it in three of his past six. We got reports pre-game last week that the Bills were trying to acquire him, and Miami certainly made a point of making them know what they missed out on.
In the upset win, Waddle was targeted on four of Tua Tagovailoa’s first seven passes, a run that included a 38-yard score where even defensive pass interference couldn’t slow him.
Do I have my questions about the weekly upside of this offense?
I do, but not this weekend. Washington has allowed a receiver to hit 22 PPR points in four straight games and hasn’t held a leading WR under his season average since Week 2. Waddle is an easy lineup lock and would make for an interesting captain choice on the Showdown streets.
Terry McLaurin | WAS (at MIA)
Terry McLaurin (quad) has appeared in just one game since Week 3 and hasn’t earned more than four targets in a game since Week 2’s loss at Green Bay.
I still think it’s a touch early to call this a lost season for those who drafted Washington’s WR1, but things are certainly trending that direction with the bye coming up (Week 12) and some difficult matchups after that, should he be close to full strength (Broncos, Vikings, and Eagles).
There is, however, hope that he’s a league winner. If you’re in the playoff hunt and roster McLaurin, you obviously have a talented team, and that would have been holding onto hope. The Commanders get the Cowboys on Christmas Day, a Week 17 game that, as things stand right now, could have Jalen Hurts under center.
I still think a reasonably healthy McLaurin is the top pass catcher on this roster, and we know this defense is struggling to the point that the offense needs to score in bunches to be competitive.
If afforded the luxury, I’d love to wait to see a healthy game before flexing him so that I won’t be ranking him as a top 30 play this week should he find his way onto the pitch this weekend.
Like that?
I’m so cultured.
