Here’s Every NFL Team’s Best WR Sleeper Pick for 2025 Fantasy Football Leagues

Not every NFL team will have a sleeper WR that pans out. Let's go through all the teams and see if we can find the best candidate on each one.

If there’s one thing fantasy managers love, it’s a good sleeper. In modern fantasy football, finding sleepers is harder than ever. Leaving no stone unturned, we’re going through all 32 NFL teams to highlight the best WR sleeper candidate on each one.

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Michael Wilson

Arizona Cardinals

The Arizona Cardinals are a highly consolidated offense. They funnel touches to James Conner, Trey McBride, and Marvin Harrison Jr. It’s unlikely anyone else will be more than the occasional unpredictable spike week. The best bet to show up on fantasy rosters for a few weeks is Michael Wilson.

The third-year receiver averaged 8.8 and 7.8 fantasy points per game in his first two seasons, respectively. Each year, there was a moment where it looked like he might be putting it all together, and his name would pop up on waiver wire columns, but it never stuck.

Wilson won’t be picked in most fantasy drafts, and that’s fair. He’ll probably have another moment or two with a big week, but it’s tough to see him becoming a reliable fantasy asset.

Darnell Mooney

Atlanta Falcons

This one’s a bit of low-hanging fruit. Darnell Mooney proved his sleeper appeal last season, catching 64 passes for 992 yards and five touchdowns as the Atlanta Falcons’ WR2. He averaged 12.1 PPR points per game, firmly landing him in WR3 territory.

Mooney’s not going to be a league-winner, but he’s absolutely worth a spot on fantasy rosters. Despite his strong 2024 season, his ADP sits at WR50. Given that he’s clearly the Falcons’ third-best offensive weapon behind Bijan Robinson and Drake London, Mooney is a solid bet to beat his ADP.

Rashod Bateman

Baltimore Ravens

After three underwhelming years, the fantasy community largely gave up on Rashod Bateman. But he was a first-round NFL Draft pick for a reason. Once upon a time, the talent was there.

Injuries played a big part in Bateman’s struggles. Finally healthy, he put together an efficient 2024 season. Although he caught only 45 passes, they went for 756 yards and nine touchdowns. The hope is that his per-target performance earns him a better target rate than the 17.3% he saw last season (80th in the NFL).

Bateman’s WR57 ADP means he’ll be drafted in most leagues. New teammate DeAndre Hopkins is going about 20 spots later, but he looks like a role player at this point. If someone’s going to break out alongside Zay Flowers, the most likely candidate is Bateman.

Joshua Palmer

Buffalo Bills

Something tells me Joshua Palmer’s WR70 ADP won’t last. It doesn’t make sense. He shouldn’t be a top-40 receiver or drafted to start, but this is a guy who’s proven himself over and over.

Palmer’s 7.2 ppg average last season can be dismissed. The Los Angeles Chargers drafted Ladd McConkey, and he’s elite. In a low-volume passing offense, there wasn’t enough to go around, especially with Quentin Johnston taking a small step forward.

The two seasons before that, Palmer filled in admirably when Keenan Allen or Mike Williams were hurt. He averaged 10.6 and 10.7 ppg in 2022 and 2023, respectively. Every fantasy manager would take that from someone on the edge of even being drafted.

Now in Buffalo, Palmer gets a QB upgrade with Josh Allen and has little target competition. Khalil Shakir mainly plays the slot, so there’s no overlap. The Buffalo Bills don’t have a clear outside flanker, so Palmer looks like the favorite for that spot. He’s better than Keon Coleman and is a rare true WR sleeper you can grab in the final rounds.

Jalen Coker

Carolina Panthers

The Carolina Panthers now have a clear WR1 in rookie first-rounder Tetairoa McMillan. He’s a virtual lock to lead the team in targets and be Carolina’s top fantasy receiver.

But outside of McMillan — and of course Chuba Hubbard in the run game — any other fantasy-relevant option is wide open. Given the choice between 35-year-old Adam Thielen, a clear bust in Xavier Legette, or the upstart Jalen Coker, we’ll take the 2024 UDFA.

Last year, Coker didn’t even see the field until Week 4 and only played 8.7% of the snaps. He really got going in Week 5, giving him 10 games to collect 32 catches for 478 yards and two scores. By Week 10, Coker was a full-time player, but an injury cost him three games.

When healthy, Coker looked like a legit NFL receiver. He had fantasy totals of 17.8 and 21.0 points, plus another game with 14.0. In just 10 full games (not counting Week 4), he had as many double-digit fantasy outings as Legette.

Bryce Young showed real progress late in the year. The Panthers should run a two-WR set with McMillan and Coker, using Thielen in the slot for 11 personnel.

Coker’s WR74 ADP puts him about 10 spots behind both Thielen and Legette, but that’s off.

Luther Burden III

Chicago Bears

It’s tough to call a second-round rookie who got a lot of hype a sleeper. But this isn’t dynasty. Luther Burden III has long-term upside, but his rookie year is less certain.

The Chicago Bears already have a WR1 in DJ Moore. They drafted Rome Odunze in the first round last year, and they took this year’s top TE, Colston Loveland, in the top half of Round 1. Asking Caleb Williams, who struggled to support even one fantasy-viable pass catcher last year, to support four or five is a stretch. But that’s what makes Burden a sleeper.

This offense should be better under new head coach Ben Johnson. Williams now has a real coach and a full offseason to develop. Plus, Moore or Odunze could miss time, which could open the door for Burden.

Historically, rookie WRs have been great fantasy bets, especially in the second half of the season. Burden’s WR51 ADP makes him easy to grab, and if his talent takes over, you could get a WR2 for a WR5 price.

Andrei Iosivas

Cincinnati Bengals

There’s really no room for another guy in a passing game run by Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins — the NFL’s best WR duo. But Higgins tends to miss a game or two. Last year, he had multiple absences due to practice injuries.

Andrei Iosivas, meanwhile, made a big leap after barely playing as a rookie. His snap share jumped from 23.9% to 79.3%. His target share was only 9.7%, but he still had four games with WR3 or better production. That’s solid for a sixth-round sophomore.

Fantasy managers should see Iosivas as a handcuff WR. He has no standalone value, but if Chase or Higgins is out, he could be a viable streamer that week.

Diontae Johnson

Cleveland Browns

Diontae Johnson’s fall from relevance needs to be studied. He had a clean rise: solid rookie year, WR2 sophomore season, WR1 in Year 3. Then Ben Roethlisberger retired, and it all fell apart.

Johnson averaged 10.6 and 11.7 ppg, respectively, in 2022 and 2023. Last year, he bounced between three teams after getting frustrated with his role and ended the season as a healthy inactive due to his attitude.

The wild thing is, for a short stretch last season, Johnson looked like a WR1 again. From Weeks 3-6, when Andy Dalton was under center, Johnson had games of 26.2, 21.3, 5.9, and 19.8 fantasy points.

Still only 28, Johnson is now trying to revive his career with the Cleveland Browns. Cleveland’s QB situation is in flux, but the WR depth chart is wide open behind Jerry Jeudy. If Johnson is mentally locked in, he’s clearly the most talented wideout on the team.

If Johnson gets buzz in training camp, his ADP will shoot up. Right now, it doesn’t even exist. He’s been totally written off. If he can’t get it together this year, it’s probably over.

Jalen Tolbert

Dallas Cowboys

For the second consecutive season, Jalen Tolbert is the Dallas Cowboys’ sleeper wide receiver. Last year, it’s fair to say he was hit. Although Tolbert didn’t exactly move the needle in fantasy, he was a complete afterthought in fantasy drafts, so any contributions were purely a bonus.

Tolbert wound up having several useful weeks, especially at the start of the season. He recorded games of 14.2, 13.2, and 21.7 fantasy points in three of his first five games and provided eight games of double-digit fantasy points overall.

Heading into the 2025 season, Tolbert does have a little more competition for targets. Last year, the Cowboys’ WR2 was a very much declining Brandin Cooks. This year, it’s a still ascending George Pickens.

As a result, Tolbert’s ADP is buried well outside the range of wide receivers who will be taken in fantasy drafts. But if Pickens misses time or has issues behind the scenes, Tolbert could pop up on the fantasy radar once again.

Pat Bryant

Denver Broncos

There was some consideration for Marvin Mims Jr. here. However, the Denver Broncos don’t seem interested in using Mims as more than a situational gadget player.

Mims had two monster games to close out the regular season — posting 30.2 and 22.1 fantasy points — yet he played just 48.5% and 31.5% of the snaps in those games, respectively.

This year, the Broncos used a third-round pick on Pat Bryant. While head coach Sean Payton’s comparisons to Michael Thomas are obviously hyperbolic, the fact that he said it is enough to perk our ears up when it comes to the rookie.

Denver doesn’t have a clear WR2 behind Courtland Sutton. Bryant could easily leapfrog Devaughn Vele and should already be ahead of Troy Franklin.

Bryant’s WR89 ADP shows that fantasy managers are completely overlooking him. The most likely outcome is that he never matters, but that’s what makes him a sleeper. Just remember Bryant’s name if he starts to get some buzz.

Isaac TeSlaa

Detroit Lions

It’s hard to imagine Isaac TeSlaa doing anything of note as a rookie. But it’s easier to picture him making noise than 31-year-old Tim Patrick suddenly returning to relevance.

Amon-Ra St. Brown and Jameson Williams are locked in as the Detroit Lions’ top two receivers. With Sam LaPorta as the third option in the passing game and Jahmyr Gibbs as one of the NFL’s most electric players, there’s not much room for sleepers.

The Lions didn’t have any surprise fantasy producers last year and likely won’t this year. But if you’re going to throw a dart, it’d be the black box that is the rookie third-rounder.

Romeo Doubs

Green Bay Packers

The problem with calling any Green Bay Packers WR a sleeper is they’re all technically sleepers — and also none of them are. The highest ADP of any Packers receiver is Jayden Reed at WR42, so fantasy managers aren’t exactly racing to draft anyone from this group.

Romeo Doubs is the best bet for sleeper status, though. Over the past two seasons, he’s played 30 games and scored at least 9.0 fantasy points in 16 of them. He’s never hit 20 points in a game, but rarely posts a lineup-killing performance. He’s the definition of “you could do worse.”

With a WR64 ADP, Doubs is almost guaranteed to beat that price. Will he be a league-winner? Definitely not. But he’ll end up in fantasy lineups plenty this season.

Jayden Higgins

Houston Texans

The Houston Texans have a few sleeper candidates — basically anyone in the passing game not named Nico Collins. With Stefon Diggs now in New England and Tank Dell out until at least 2026, the Texans have an opening at WR2. To fill it, they signed Christian Kirk and drafted Jayden Higgins and Jaylin Noel.

Any of the three could emerge as a viable WR3 in fantasy, but if we’re picking one, it’s Higgins. While he’s not a perfect prospect, he has second-round draft capital. His main competition is a veteran making close to the league minimum in 2025 and a college teammate he outplayed.

Higgins’ WR55 ADP makes him cheap in drafts. There’s room for a second fantasy-relevant receiver in this offense. Kirk or Noel could grab it, but Higgins is the best mix of opportunity and cost.

Michael Pittman Jr.

Indianapolis Colts

It’s wild that Michael Pittman Jr. can be considered a sleeper just two years after averaging 15.6 PPR points per game. Chalk it up to the Anthony Richardson effect.

Pittman’s 2025 outlook is rough. He’ll be catching passes from either Richardson or Daniel Jones — neither of whom inspires much fantasy confidence. Last year, Josh Downs outplayed him to the point that fantasy managers now have Downs ahead of Pittman in ADP.

Over the past two seasons, Pittman has averaged 10.0 ppg with Richardson and 15.8 with other quarterbacks. If you’re drafting Pittman, you’re probably hoping Jones gets in there at some point, which does seem likely. Both quarterbacks are expected to make starts.

What we know is that Pittman is a talented receiver. He was nearly a WR1 two years ago. Last season, he played through bad QB play and a back injury that nearly ended his season — until he changed his mind and suited up anyway. At WR52, Pittman is likely worth the gamble.

Dyami Brown

Jacksonville Jaguars

Let’s be clear — it’s unlikely Dyami Brown matters in fantasy. The Jacksonville Jaguars’ offense is expected to be very consolidated, with touches going to Brian Thomas Jr., Travis Hunter, and whoever leads the backfield.

Brown was a weak prospect and didn’t do much after entering the NFL. Last year was the first time he passed 200 receiving yards…in a season. Now in Year 5, his career high is 308 yards.

The buzz around Brown comes from his playoff showing. He went 5-89-1 and 6-98 in the Washington Commanders’ first two postseason games. Now in Jacksonville, he’s penciled in as the WR3 — possibly WR2 depending on Hunter’s snap count.

Maybe Brown breaks out in Year 5 after doing next to nothing for four years, but it’s unlikely. He has Trevor Lawrence at quarterback and needs to beat out better players. However, if anyone can unlock a third fantasy receiver in Jacksonville, it’s new head coach Liam Coen.

Hollywood Brown

Kansas City Chiefs

There’s only one potential sleeper WR on the Kansas City Chiefs. Rashee Rice and Xavier Worthy are the clear top two, with ADPs too high to be considered sleepers. Hollywood Brown, though, is way down at WR61.

This new version of Patrick Mahomes — the one who’s more of a game manager and saves the hero stuff for big moments — doesn’t exactly support a fourth fantasy pass catcher. But after Brown came off IR in Week 16, he was involved right away, posting 9.5 and 8.6 fantasy points, respectively.

Kansas City valued him enough that they held him out in Week 18 along with their other starters. Yet, in the postseason, he struggled, scoring no more than 6.5 points and had zero receptions off two targets in the Divisional Round vs. Houston.

Still, Brown enters Year 2 with Kansas City and should have a full, healthy offseason this time. We’ve seen him post WR2 numbers over a full season before. Given the price and the QB he’s tied to, fantasy managers could do worse.

Jack Bech

Las Vegas Raiders

The Las Vegas Raiders’ WR room is wide open after Jakobi Meyers. Sure, Brock Bowers is essentially the WR1, but it’s not like Geno Smith hasn’t supported three fantasy pass catchers before.

Jack Bech is a rookie second-round pick with a fairly unimpressive profile. He also comes from TCU, a school that’s never produced a quality NFL receiver. Still, he’s got the inside track to the WR2 role. Bech’s main competition is Tre Tucker. At a WR68 ADP, it’s cheap to take a swing on the unknown rookie.

Tre Harris

Los Angeles Chargers

For the second year in a row, the Chargers spent a second-round pick on a wide receiver. It’s hard to top last year’s pick, McConkey, who’s locked in as the team’s WR1. He’s going to dominate targets, and no one’s threatening that.

As for WR2, it’s an open battle between former first-rounder Johnston, familiar face and new signee Mike Williams, and rookie Tre Harris. Johnston made a big jump after a rough rookie year but didn’t fully shake the bust label. That’s why the Chargers added both Harris and Williams.

Williams is 31 and coming off a down year, in which he caught just 21 passes for 298 yards and one touchdown in 18 games split between the New York Jets and Pittsburgh Steelers.

Harris is interesting. He was highly productive in his final college season, but he’s an older rookie at 23 and didn’t break out until midway through his age-20 campaign. But even if you’re not high on him, his WR58 ADP makes him a bargain.

Don’t assume every prospect evaluation will pan out. Harris has real sleeper appeal as a possible WR2 in a Justin Herbert offense.

Jordan Whittington

Los Angeles Rams

This is as deep a sleeper as it gets. No one should consider drafting Jordan Whittington (he doesn’t even have an ADP, he’s so far down the list).

But remember Weeks 4 and 5 of last season. With both Puka Nacua and Cooper Kupp out, Whittington, a sixth-round rookie, started and posted fantasy games of 12.2 and 15.9 points.

Right now, Tutu Atwell is listed as the Los Angeles Rams’ WR3 and likely fills the slot role. But if Nacua or Davante Adams misses time, Whittington could slide outside. He’s not worth drafting, but is a deep sleeper to watch on waivers if opportunity opens up.

Nick Westbrook-Ikhine

Miami Dolphins

Finding a sleeper wide receiver on the Miami Dolphins is tough. When Tyreek Hill or Jaylen Waddle struggles, the offense shifts toward short passes to Jonnu Smith and De’Von Achane. So even if one gets hurt, it’s unlikely another WR steps up for fantasy.

Still, the best long-shot option is Nick Westbrook-Ikhine, who always seems to pop up on fantasy rosters, even if just briefly.

Westbrook-Ikhine is coming off his best season, yet still didn’t hit 500 yards. He caught 32 passes but somehow scored nine touchdowns (an absurd 28.1% TD rate), despite having just two games with more than 50 receiving yards.

As the Dolphins’ likely WR3, Westbrook-Ikhine may pop for a week or two and land in waiver wire columns. But he’s not worth drafting.

Tai Felton

Minnesota Vikings

There’s not a true sleeper WR on the Minnesota Vikings. Justin Jefferson and Jordan Addison are locked in, and T.J. Hockenson is the clear next option. There’s no room for a fourth guy.

Last year, Jalen Nailor flashed a bit with four double-digit games, but he never became fantasy relevant. Heading into Year 4, we know who he is, and that’s why we’re turning to the rookie.

The Vikings took Tai Felton in the third round. He has only one year of strong production but was dominant in his final season at Maryland. With 4.37 speed, Felton brings something different to this group. If he grabs the WR3 job, he could offer injury-contingent value if Jefferson or Addison goes down.

Kyle Williams

New England Patriots

The New England Patriots drafted Kyle Williams in the third round. Williams enters a wide-open WR room with a young, rising quarterback. Stefon Diggs is the clear WR1, but he’s 31 and coming off a torn ACL. Thus, there’s room for someone else to step up.

The fantasy community seems to have decided that guy is Williams. His ADP is already up to WR63, which is high for a third-round rookie who’s currently fourth on the depth chart.

That’s a little disappointing, since Williams is a guy fantasy managers should want to take shots on, but he should be cheaper. His ADP ignores the presence of Mack Hollins, DeMario Douglas, and Kendrick Bourne. Still, we know what Hollins and Bourne are, and while Douglas has a bit more juice, he looks like a long-term WR3.

Maybe Williams can break through.

Rashid Shaheed

New Orleans Saints

The question with Rashid Shaheed isn’t whether he’s a sleeper — it’s why he still is.
Before getting hurt last season, Shaheed was averaging 13.6 fantasy points per game (4.0 more than Chris Olave).

Are we sure Olave deserves a WR36 ADP while Shaheed sits at WR54? The latter opened 2024 with four games of at least 16.3 fantasy points. He’s boom-or-bust and relies on splash plays, but he’s cheap.

The New Orleans Saints aren’t expected to be good, which means they’ll be trailing and throwing. They’ll still score touchdowns, though, and Shaheed is a big-play threat who costs next to nothing.

Wan’Dale Robinson

New York Giants

There’s no obvious WR sleeper on the New York Giants. The QB play should improve — it can’t be worse than Jones and Tommy DeVito — but aside from Malik Nabers, there’s not much.

Wan’Dale Robinson is technically the WR2 and mainly plays in the slot. Darius Slayton will be the flanker. Some weeks, Robinson will catch a ton of underneath targets and be a PPR machine. Other weeks, Slayton might hit on a deep ball. It’ll be messy and hard to predict.

Robinson gets the edge because his WR72 ADP puts him on the fringe of being drafted. He’s also younger and quietly averaged 10.7 fantasy points per game last season.

Arian Smith

New York Jets

The Jets’ wide receiver group behind Garrett Wilson is ugly. The best sleeper option is Arian Smith by default. Allen Lazard and Josh Reynolds are technically WR2 and WR3, respectively, but both are journeymen in their late 20s. This isn’t the year they suddenly break out.

If you’re taking a flier on anyone not named Wilson, it has to be a young guy — and not Malachi Corley, who caught just three passes for 16 yards as a rookie.

The Jets drafted Smith in the early fourth round, and although fourth-round rookies rarely make noise, his ceiling is at least higher than the others.

None

Philadelphia Eagles

This is a run-heavy offense built around Saquon Barkley. When the Philadelphia Eagles do pass, the targets are heavily funneled to A.J. Brown, DeVonta Smith, and, to a lesser extent, Dallas Goedert.

Last season, there were stretches where both Brown and Smith missed time, and no other wide receiver stepped up. For example, in Week 12, the Eagles scored 37 points against the Rams. Smith didn’t play, yet every non-Brown WR combined for just one catch for four yards. There is no Eagles wideout worth considering outside of those two.

Calvin Austin III

Pittsburgh Steelers

It’s unlikely any Steelers wide receiver outside of DK Metcalf has fantasy value. The offense is too run-heavy, and the secondary receivers lack upside. But Calvin Austin III has at least shown flashes.

Austin averaged just 6.6 fantasy points per game last season, but he did deliver six double-digit outings, including three WR1-level games.


Austin is expected to be the primary slot receiver, and if we’re choosing someone to surprise, it’s not going to be 33-year-old Robert Woods. With an ADP around WR100, Austin doesn’t need to be drafted. But if he shows signs of a breakout — and if Aaron Rodgers can support more than one fantasy-relevant WR — he’ll be worth a waiver add.

None

San Francisco 49ers

The San Francisco 49ers are tricky. In theory, there should be sleeper wide receivers with Brandon Aiyuk expected to miss the start of the season as he recovers from a torn ACL.

Even when Aiyuk returns, there’s room for another fantasy-viable WR. But the only realistic candidates are Jauan Jennings and Ricky Pearsall, and both are being drafted too early to qualify as sleepers.

Beyond those three, there’s no one on the roster with legitimate upside. Demarcus Robinson is a 31-year-old journeyman, and Jacob Cowing got some rookie-season buzz but has just four career catches. It would take injuries to three of Aiyuk, Jennings, Pearsall, or George Kittle for another WR to matter, and that’s too remote to even consider.

Tory Horton

Seattle Seahawks

It’s rare for a fifth-round rookie to make a fantasy impact, but Tory Horton is at least worth watching. He had two big years at Colorado State in 2022 and 2023, carries an 87th percentile speed score, and brings something different than Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Cooper Kupp, or Jake Bobo.

We’re going with Horton over Bobo because the latter, a third-year UDFA, posted eight games with zero catches last season. His best fantasy effort? Just 6.8 points.

JSN is locked in as the WR1, but there could be an opening at WR2, especially with Kupp nearing the end after two down seasons.

Horton’s ADP is well outside the draftable range. No need to draft him, but stay alert for signs of increased usage.

Emeka Egbuka

Tampa Bay Buccaneers

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers seem to churn out WR sleepers annually. Last year, it was Jalen McMillan. This year, it’s first-rounder Emeka Egbuka.

Egbuka’s ADP isn’t low because of his talent. Typically, we don’t see first-round wide receivers with top 10 quarterbacks fall to WR47. But he’s in an Odunze or Smith-Njigba situation — blocked by Mike Evans and Chris Godwin.

As the WR3, Egbuka likely won’t offer more than WR4 value. However, that might not be his role all year.

September matters… but December matters more. Egbuka might hover as a fringe Flex option, but if Evans or Godwin goes down (or if Evans, at 32, starts to decline), Egbuka could pop. And at his price, he’s worth the risk.

Elic Ayomanor

Tennessee Titans

Yes, we’re hyping another Day 3 rookie. It’s a long shot, but that’s what sleepers are.

Calvin Ridley is locked in as the Tennessee Titans’ WR1. Behind him are Tyler Lockett and Van Jefferson. Lockett is 33 and coming off a 7.1 ppg season. Jefferson is 29 and hasn’t cracked the top 100 wide receivers in either of the past two seasons.

So why not Elic Ayomanor?

Shockingly, Ayomanor’s ADP is WR78 — higher than both Lockett and Jefferson. Fantasy managers clearly think he has the best shot to become the Titans’ No. 2 fantasy WR.

Noah Brown

Washington Commanders

Noah Brown has only had one year where he was fantasy relevant — in 2023, when he averaged 10.2 points per game (that’s not a lot). Last year, he averaged 7.8 ppg, but before he was shut down after Week 13, he started to emerge as the WR3. He had three double-digit games prior to his injury.


This year, the Commanders brought in Deebo Samuel Sr. to be their WR2, but he looked washed last season and has a lengthy injury history.

There’s a real path for Brown to end up as the WR2 opposite Terry McLaurin. And yet, his ADP is outside the top 100 — completely off the radar. Don’t be shocked if he’s a popular waiver add at some point this season.

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