Every decision in Fantasy Premier League comes back to price. You have a budget of 100.0m to fill fifteen slots, and the pricing system is designed to make that feel just slightly too tight. You can afford two premium assets but not three. You can upgrade your midfield but only by downgrading your bench. Every 0.1m matters — and understanding how FPL prices work gives you a genuine edge over managers who treat them as an afterthought.

Here is the complete guide to FPL player prices: how they are set, how they shift, and how to squeeze maximum value from every million in your budget.

FPL Player Prices Explained

At the start of each season, the FPL team at Premier League headquarters assigns an initial price to every registered player. These prices are set before a ball is kicked and reflect a combination of factors: the player’s real-world ability, their output in the previous season, their expected role, and — crucially — how popular they are likely to be among FPL managers.

Prices range from 4.0m at the bottom end to 14.0m or higher for the game’s elite assets. In 2024/25, Mohamed Salah started at 12.5m, Erling Haaland at 14.0m, and Cole Palmer at 10.5m — reflecting their status as the most productive fantasy assets in the league. At the other end, squad goalkeepers, fringe defenders, and newly promoted players fill the 4.0m to 4.5m bracket.

The initial price is not a prediction of how many points a player will score. It is a balancing mechanism. If Haaland were priced at 8.0m, every single manager would own him and the game would lose its strategic depth. Pricing forces trade-offs — and trade-offs are where skill enters the equation.

What Determines a Player’s Starting Price

FPL has never published the exact formula, but patterns are clear after years of observation. A forward who scored 15+ Premier League goals will be priced higher than one who scored 8. A midfielder who moved from the Championship to a top-six club gets a bump to reflect their new platform. Players returning from serious injuries are sometimes priced slightly below their historical level, creating potential value if they recover fully.

New signings are particularly interesting. When a club signs a 60-million-pound striker from abroad, FPL typically prices them between 7.0m and 9.0m — high enough to reflect their quality but low enough to account for the uncertainty of adapting to a new league. These players can be goldmines or traps, depending on how quickly they settle.

How Prices Change During the Season

Initial prices are only the starting point. From gameweek one onwards, prices shift every night based on transfer activity across the 11 million managers playing the game. Buy a player heavily enough and his price rises by 0.1m. Sell a player aggressively enough and his price falls. Over the course of a season, popular assets can climb by 1.0m or more, while out-of-favour players can drop by a similar amount.

The algorithm behind these changes is driven by net transfers — the difference between transfers in and transfers out — measured against a threshold that scales with ownership. A player owned by 40% of the game needs far more transfer activity to trigger a change than one owned by 3%. This prevents high-ownership players from swinging wildly on modest activity.

Changes are processed during an overnight window between roughly 1:30 AM and 2:30 AM GMT. A player can only move by 0.1m per day, but can rise or fall on consecutive nights. After a massive haul, it is common to see a player rise three or four times in a single gameweek.

For a deeper look at the pricing algorithm and how to predict changes before they happen, see the FPL360 price changes tracker, which monitors real-time transfer activity and flags players approaching a rise or fall.

Price Brackets and What You Get

Not all price points are equal. Each bracket comes with its own risk-reward profile, and understanding what you can realistically expect from each tier is fundamental to squad building.

Budget (4.0m–5.5m)

This bracket is where you find bench fodder, rotation risks, and the occasional hidden gem. Goalkeepers like a 4.0m third-choice stopper exist purely to sit on your bench and free up funds elsewhere. At 4.5m, you get starting goalkeepers from promoted or lower-table clubs — functional picks who might return 120–140 points across a season.

Budget defenders in the 4.0m to 4.5m range are typically fullbacks from newly promoted sides. They will play most weeks but offer limited attacking upside. The sweet spot in this tier is a 4.5m defender who nails down a starting place and chips in with the odd clean sheet — someone like a newly promoted left-back who quietly returns 100+ points.

Budget midfielders and forwards at 5.0m to 5.5m are where value hunting gets interesting. A 5.0m midfielder who plays 90 minutes every week and contributes 4–5 goals can be an outstanding bench option. These players free up the funds that allow you to afford the premiums.

Mid-Range (5.5m–8.0m)

The engine room of most FPL squads. This is where you find starting midfielders with genuine attacking roles, reliable defenders from solid clubs, and forwards who offer consistent if unspectacular output.

A 6.5m midfielder is expected to return around 130–160 points. A 7.5m forward should be a regular starter with 10+ goal involvements. Defenders in this range — think 5.5m to 6.5m — come from clubs with strong defensive records and set-piece threat. A centre-back priced at 5.5m from a top-eight side who takes corners or free kicks nearby can outscore many attackers at the same price.

The risk here is mediocrity. Mid-range players who return 120 points are not disastrous, but they quietly drag your rank down because the opportunity cost — what you could have spent that money on — is significant.

Premium (8.0m–10.0m)

Premium picks are the reliable points machines. These are players in strong attacking systems who consistently deliver: a winger at a top-four club, a creative midfielder with penalty duties, or a forward leading the line for a side that creates plenty of chances.

At 8.5m to 9.5m, you expect 170–200 points. Players like Bukayo Saka, Bruno Fernandes, and Alexander Isak have lived in this bracket. Captaining them in favourable fixtures is viable, and they tend to hold their value or rise steadily. The key question with premiums is whether to own two or three — and that depends entirely on how much you can save elsewhere.

Elite (10.0m+)

The top tier. Erling Haaland at 14.0m, Mohamed Salah at 12.5m, Cole Palmer at 10.5m. These players are expected to return 200+ points and serve as consistent captaincy options. Owning zero elite assets is a bold differential strategy. Owning three is nearly impossible without a squad full of 4.5m bench warmers.

Most successful squads carry one or two elite picks and build around them. The captain armband gravitates here — and since captain points are doubled, the maths overwhelmingly favours having at least one elite asset in your squad.

Building a Balanced Squad on Budget

Your 100.0m budget needs to stretch across two goalkeepers, five defenders, five midfielders, and three forwards. That is an average of 6.7m per player — which tells you immediately that you cannot fill every slot with premium talent. The game is about allocation: spend heavily where points are concentrated and save where they are not.

The Two-Premium Template

The most common successful structure involves two elite or premium attackers, a strong mid-range core, and budget enablers on the bench. A rough allocation might look like this:

  • Goalkeepers (9.0m total): One 5.0m starter, one 4.0m bench keeper. Rotating goalkeepers at 4.5m each is viable but adds weekly decision fatigue.
  • Defenders (26.0m total): Three starters in the 5.5m–6.5m range from clean-sheet-friendly clubs, plus two bench options at 4.0m–4.5m. Defenders from top-six sides with attacking threat are the priority.
  • Midfielders (40.0m total): This is where the money goes. Two premiums at 10.0m+ and a mid-range pick at 7.0m–8.0m, plus two budget enablers at 5.0m–5.5m. Midfielders score more points per million than any other position in FPL — bonus points, goals, assists, and clean sheet points for defenders reclassified as midfielders all contribute.
  • Forwards (25.0m total): One premium forward at 10.0m+, one mid-range option at 7.0m–7.5m, and a budget enabler at 5.5m–6.0m. Or two mid-range forwards and more investment in midfield — the maths often favours the latter approach.

These numbers are flexible. The point is that 60–65% of your budget should go to your eight strongest starters, with the remaining 35–40% filling the bench and enabling spots. Check your current allocation using the FPL360 Dashboard, which shows your squad value breakdown at a glance.

Formation Economics

Your formation choice has financial implications. A 3-4-3 formation puts three forwards on the pitch, which is expensive because even a budget forward costs 5.5m or more. A 3-5-2 lets you play five midfielders — and since there are more quality mid-range midfielders than forwards, this formation tends to offer better value. Many top managers settle on 3-4-3 early in the season and shift to 3-5-2 or 4-4-2 as the fixture calendar dictates.

Tracking Prices with FPL360

Knowing that prices matter is one thing. Monitoring them daily across 700+ players is another. The FPL360 Price Changes tool does this work for you, tracking real-time transfer activity and flagging players approaching a rise or fall before the overnight window processes changes.

Sorting and Filtering

The tool lets you filter by position and team — essential when you are shopping for a specific type of player. Looking for a goalkeeper under 5.0m? Filter to goalkeepers and sort by price. Need a midfielder from a club with strong upcoming fixtures? Cross-reference the price tool with the FPL360 Fixture Difficulty ratings to find players who are both affordable and well-positioned.

Identifying Value Picks

The most actionable use of price data is spotting players who are underpriced relative to their output. A 5.5m midfielder who has averaged 6 points per match over the last six gameweeks is dramatically underpriced — the market just has not caught up yet. These players tend to rise steadily as managers notice, so buying early locks in a lower price and builds squad value.

Conversely, a 9.0m forward averaging 3 points per match is overpriced. Even if you believe they will come good eventually, holding them while they bleed value costs you twice: poor points now and reduced selling price later. The FPL360 Tools suite helps you spot these mismatches before the wider community does.

Price vs Value: Finding the Sweet Spot

Price alone tells you nothing about value. A player’s worth to your FPL squad is measured in points per million — their total points divided by their price. This metric reveals where the real bargains are hiding.

The Maths That Matters

Consider two players:

  • Player A: Priced at 6.0m, scores 150 points = 25.0 points per million
  • Player B: Priced at 13.0m, scores 220 points = 16.9 points per million

Player B scores more raw points, but Player A delivers significantly better value per million spent. The 7.0m difference between them could fund an upgrade elsewhere that adds more than the 70-point gap. If that 7.0m turns a 4.5m bench defender into an 11.5m premium midfielder who scores 200 points, you have gained 130 points on the upgrade while only losing 70 on the swap — a net gain of 60 points.

This does not mean you should avoid expensive players. It means you should only pay premium prices when the player is a genuine captaincy option. Haaland at 14.0m returning 220 points sounds like modest value at 15.7 points per million — until you factor in that captaining him in 20 gameweeks effectively doubles those points. His captaincy ceiling makes the premium worthwhile.

Where Value Lives

Historically, the best value in FPL sits in two places:

  • Breakout players priced at 5.0m–7.0m: Young attackers earning a starting spot, new signings adapting faster than expected, defenders reclassified as midfielders. These players are priced on last season’s data but performing at next season’s level. Cole Palmer was 5.0m at the start of 2023/24 — he returned 244 points, a staggering 48.8 points per million.
  • Set-piece specialists at any price: A 5.0m defender who takes corners and free kicks in a team that scores from set pieces can match the output of a 7.0m midfielder. Set-piece involvement is the great equaliser in FPL — it adds points without requiring the player to be a creative force in open play.

Key Price Thresholds to Watch

Understanding when and how to act on price movements separates proactive managers from reactive ones. These are the thresholds and strategies that matter most.

When to Buy Rising Players

If you have already decided to bring in a player, do it before they rise. Waiting costs you 0.1m per night of delay, and that adds up fast over a season. However, do not buy a player solely because they are rising. Transfer surges are driven by short-term hype — a player who scored a hat-trick attracts 300,000 transfers, rises three times, and then blanks for a month. Buy players you believe in for the medium term, and let the price movement be a bonus rather than the reason.

The Selling Price Trap

Remember that you only keep half the profit, rounded down, when selling a player who has risen. If you bought Saka at 10.0m and he has risen to 10.3m, your selling price is only 10.1m — you keep just 0.1m of the 0.3m rise. A single 0.1m rise gives you nothing on sale. You need at least 0.2m of price appreciation before any profit hits your bank.

This means selling a recently purchased player who has risen only 0.1m recovers exactly what you paid. There is no penalty, but there is no gain either. Factor this into your transfer planning — if you are buying a player for a short-term punt, understand that you will likely sell them at cost.

Wildcard Price Strategies

Wildcards reset your squad entirely, and they are the single biggest opportunity to exploit price dynamics. When activating a wildcard:

  • Sell high: Before activating, note your selling prices. Players you bought cheaply and who have risen significantly lock in profit that funds upgrades elsewhere.
  • Buy early in the gameweek: Activate your wildcard as early as possible. This gives you maximum time to adjust to price changes before the deadline. If a player in your wildcard draft rises, you were smart. If they fall, you can swap them out at no cost.
  • Target players about to rise: Use the FPL360 price tracker to identify players trending upward and include them in your wildcard squad early. Building 0.5m–1.0m of value during a wildcard week sets you up for the rest of the season.
  • Do not chase falling prices: On a wildcard, you can afford to wait for players whose prices are dropping. Let them bottom out before buying — there is no transfer cost to changing your mind.

Price awareness is not about obsessing over every 0.1m fluctuation. It is about making informed decisions that compound over 38 gameweeks. A manager who consistently buys risers a day early, avoids the selling price trap, and allocates budget efficiently will finish the season with a squad worth 2.0m–3.0m more than one who ignores prices entirely. That difference is the gap between your ideal team and the compromised version.