<
>

Fantasy baseball dynasty rankings: Top 300 players for 2025 and beyond

Gunnar Henderson is truly a rising star who should be taken in the first round of dynasty drafts. AP

The 2025 season is rapidly approaching, and what better way to quench your thirst for fantasy baseball than to dive right into a dynasty or keeper league! These kinds of leagues take the fantasy baseball experience to the next level, balancing success today with building a roster that can sustain that success for the long haul.

To give you a head start, I've provided rankings that can help a new dynasty/keeper manager handle an inaugural draft, just as they can help an experienced dynasty or keeper manager make final roster cut-down decisions. It's in this space where I rank players for the next five-plus seasons, serving as an effective price guide for dynasty and keeper leagues.

The rankings formula

This Dynasty 300 update uses the following player valuation formula:

  • 2025 performance: 20%.

  • 2026 performance: 20%.

  • 2027 performance: 20%.

  • 2028 performance: 20%.

  • 2029 performance and beyond: 20%.

The rationale behind these weights is to provide a long-term projection of player values, in order to help fantasy managers in dynasty/keeper leagues who are weighing trades, deciding on keepers or preparing for their upcoming drafts. For those in redraft/single-year leagues, my points-league rankings for 2025 alone can be found here. This page, however, is for fantasy managers who need to forecast deep into the future.

Several factors can influence these values. Here are some of the other things to consider:

  • Your league's format itself: Is your dynasty league a traditional roto or points-based league? Does it use ESPN's standard settings, or more traditional or even deeper roster settings? These rankings take a more points-based lean, to mirror our standard game, but since they project over a long range, they do bring into consideration player values over a broader set of formats.

  • Number of keepers: How many players can you keep each year, and must every team keep the same number?

  • Player pricing: Is your league a draft or salary-cap format, and do you price players by draft round or for a dollar amount -- or is price not part of the keeper equation?

  • Contract factors: Are there limits on the number of years you can keep a player and/or are there guaranteed contracts, and is there price inflation?

  • Farm teams: Does your league include minor league/farm-team slots and how are these players factored into the keeper system?

  • Team competitiveness: Are you a contender, rebuilder or something in between?

Dynasty 300

Note: "Elig. Pos." is the player's eligible position(s) for 2025 in an ESPN league. Positional eligibility is determined based upon a minimum of 20 games, or any position played at least 25% of the time, in 2024. Players' projected future positions -- for 2026 and beyond -- are considered in the ranking. Players' listed ages are as of Opening Day 2025, March 27.

Players' peak rankings in past keeper lists ("Prv. Peak") are also provided; these lists have been published semiannually since 2010 and triannually since 2014 (except mid-2022), with preseason ("Pre"), midseason ("Mid") and end-of-season ("End") designated to differentiate the times of the years in question. For example, Rafael Devers is listed with a peak of 7 in "Mid 20," meaning that, before this edition, his best all-time rank had been 7th, in the 2020 midseason list (Devers also garnered a No. 7 ranking in both the end-of-2019 and preseason-2020 lists, but for these purposes, the peak ranking represents the most recent time the player reached said peak.) A "--" means that the player has never before made the top 300 overall.

Catcher

First base

Second base

Shortstop

Third base

Outfield

Designated hitter

Starting pitcher

Relief pitcher