Fixture rotation is one of the most debated strategies in FPL, and for good reason — it can win you points in the short term, but it can also cost you big. I’ve been managing fantasy teams for over a decade, and I’ve learned that rotation works brilliantly in a 3–4 gameweek window when fixtures align perfectly, and falls apart spectacularly when you chase it desperately. Let me walk you through the science of FPL fixture rotation, when to use it, and crucially, when to abandon it entirely.
What Is FPL Fixture Rotation, and Why Does It Matter?
Fixture rotation in FPL is the practice of swapping players week-to-week based on their upcoming fixture difficulty, rather than holding a single player through a tough run. The idea is simple: if your main defender has a brutal fixture in GW38 while an alternative has an easy one, you bench the first and play the second, then flip it back next gameweek.
The appeal is obvious. In a classic mini-league where every point counts, squeezing an extra 3–4 points per week by rotating into soft fixtures can swing your final league position. But here’s where most managers go wrong — they rotate compulsively, burning transfers, and ending up with neither a strong captain nor a reliable bench.
The Core Truth: FPL fixture rotation only works when you have two genuinely elite players at the same position with perfectly mirrored fixture cycles. Otherwise, you’re just wasting transfers.
The GW38 Fixture Landscape: Which Teams Have Easy Runs?
Looking at GW38, we have a simultaneous final gameweek with all matches kicking off at 15:00 on Sunday, 24 May. This is actually your best opportunity for rotation planning, because everyone plays at once — no scouts picking up momentum.
Let me break down the fixture difficulties by position:
| Match | Home FDR | Away FDR | Best for Rotation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burnley vs Wolves | 2 | 1 | Wolves defence (easiest) |
| Man City vs Aston Villa | 5 | 3 | Avoid both |
| Crystal Palace vs Arsenal | 3 | 4 | Neither ideal |
| Brighton vs Man Utd | 4 | 3 | Man Utd defence |
| Liverpool vs Brentford | 4 | 3 | Brentford (easier) |
| Fulham vs Newcastle | 3 | 3 | Dead even |
| Nott’m Forest vs Bournemouth | 3 | 3 | Dead even |
| Spurs vs Everton | 3 | 3 | Dead even |
| Sunderland vs Chelsea | 3 | 3 | Dead even |
| West Ham vs Leeds | 3 | 2 | Leeds (easiest run) |
GW38 is essentially a final-day bloodbath with no obvious rotation plays. Every team is fighting for league position or avoiding relegation, which means intensity is maxed out across the board. The only teams with genuinely soft fixtures are Wolves (FDR 1) and Leeds (FDR 2), but these are lower-mid-table sides with limited fantasy value anyway.
The Best FPL Rotating Defender Pairs (If You Must)
If you’re committed to fixture rotation at the back, you need two defenders from different teams who have opposing fixture cycles over a 3–4 gameweek block. In GW38, there’s very little separation, but let me give you the thinking.
The Van Dijk vs Virgil Alternative: Virgil from Liverpool sits at 175 points and has form 8.0 — incredible value — but faces a 4-difficulty fixture against Brentford. He’s owned by 31.5% of the player base, so he’s a lock for most managers. You don’t rotate out of this; you hold him. Full stop.
Gabriel vs Senesi: Gabriel (Arsenal, 209 pts) is the highest-scoring defender, owned by 45.4%. He faces Arsenal’s toughest fixture of the season (difficulty 4 at Palace). Senesi (Bournemouth, 175 pts) has identical fixture difficulty. This could be a rotation point, but honestly, Gabriel is so far ahead on points that benching him feels like panic selling. His underlying stats (5 assists, 3 goals) show he’s not just overperforming — he’s a genuine elite asset.
The real problem with GW38 is that there are no naturally opposing fixture cycles. Every team plays once, simultaneously. Rotation works best when you have 3–4 consecutive gameweeks where Team A’s fixture goes 2-1-3 (easy-mid-hard) and Team B’s goes 4-5-2 (hard-hard-easy), so you can swap systematically. That dynamic doesn’t exist here.
Why Goalkeeper Rotation Almost Always Fails
Let me be blunt: goalkeeper rotation is a trap. I’ve watched managers in my mini-league chase rotating keepers for years, and it costs them more points than it gains.
Here’s why. Goalkeeper fantasy output is heavily dependent on clean sheets and save points, which correlate strongly with team strength and actual defensive solidity — not just fixture difficulty. A top-6 side facing a weaker team still gets clean sheets because their players are better, not because the number on the difficulty chart is lower.
The second issue is that all-play-simultaneous weeks (like GW38) eliminate the core advantage of goalkeeper rotation entirely. You can’t rotate into a fixture that’s genuinely easier because everyone plays at the same time against teams of similar quality.
The Math: If your main keeper (e.g., Raya) typically scores 4.5 points per game and your rotation option scores 3.8, rotating saves you 0.7 points per week. But it costs 4 points in transfer fees (or a bench slot), meaning you need the rotation to work for six consecutive weeks just to break even. In 3–4 gameweek windows, it’s almost impossible.
My advice? Pick the keeper from the team with the strongest defensive form and hold them. Right now, that’s not a question of rotation — it’s a question of who’s actually keeping clean sheets (Arsenal, Man City, Brentford). Check our Fixture Difficulty tool to see which teams have the easiest 5-game runs coming, then pick your keeper and forget about them.
The \”Set and Forget\” Alternative: Why It Often Wins
Over ten years of FPL, I’ve noticed a pattern: the managers who finish top of my mini-league rarely rotate defenders or goalkeepers at all. Instead, they identify the elite players — the ones with both form and fixture — and hold them through thick and thin.
This strategy works because:
- Transfer savings compound: Every rotation costs you 4 points in fees (or a chip). If you rotate four times in a season, that’s 16 points lost. Holding a 7-pointer every week gains you 364 points across 52 weeks.
- You avoid panic trades: Rotating often means you’re glued to the fixture list, making emotional decisions. Holding forces you to trust your initial pick, which reduces impulsive mistakes.
- The best players score through bad fixtures: Gabriel just scored 209 points partly because he’s so good that even against tougher opponents, he racks up attacking returns. Benching elite players is leaving points on the table.
Use the FPL360 Dashboard to track your team’s underlying metrics (shots, tackles, interceptions, bonus points). If your defender is getting 5+ bonus points every other week, keep them. Fixture difficulty is secondary to form and quality.
When Fixture Rotation Actually Works: The 3–4 GW Sweet Spot
That said, there are specific windows where rotating defenders does generate value. The key is a 3–4 gameweek block where two players have genuinely mirrored fixtures.
Example setup that could work: Imagine in a future gameweek block you had:
- Defender A: Fixtures 4-5-3 (hard, very hard, mid)
- Defender B: Fixtures 1-2-4 (easy, easy, hard)
Here, you’d play B for GW1–2, swap to A for GW3, then potentially swap back. That’s two rotations over three weeks, yielding maybe 3–5 extra points if B outscores A in easy weeks and vice versa.
But even this only works if:
- Both players have similar underlying point-per-game averages (so form is neutral).
- The fixture difficulty gap is at least 2 points (a 1-point gap is noise).
- You’re comparing defenders from similar-quality teams (no point rotating a City defender with a Wolves defender; City’s “easy” is harder than Wolves’ “hard”).
- You have the transfers available and aren’t burning your free hit or wildcard.
In GW38, none of these conditions are met. There’s no obvious mirrored cycle, and all matches are simultaneous.
When to Break the Rotation: The Override Rules
Even if you’ve planned a rotation, there are moments to abandon it entirely.
Rule 1: Never bench a player in top form. If Gabriel is averaging 7+ points per game and has six appearances left, his fixture difficulty becomes almost irrelevant. Form beats fixture in 80% of cases. I’ve made this mistake before — benching Haaland (239 pts) against an “easy” opponent for a mid-tier forward with a “better” fixture, and watching Haaland haul while my alternative blanked. Never again.
Rule 2: Check for injury/rotation risk. A defender with an easy fixture is worthless if their team’s manager is resting them. Always cross-reference team news with fixture rotations. Use our Stats page to see recent appearance records — if a player has played six consecutive matches, they might be benched next week regardless of fixture.
Rule 3: Avoid rotating into unproven players. Your rotation alternative needs a minimum of three games worth of recent data. If you’re rotating into a player with only one game under their belt, you’re basically gambling. I’ve done this, backed it, and it’s cost me 20+ points when the new player underperformed.
Rule 4: If a rotation costs more than two transfers, skip it. Rotating one defender is one transfer. Rotating one defender and one midfielder and bringing in a tactical bench option is three transfers. That’s 12 points lost just to fees. It’s almost never worth it unless you’re chasing a specific league position by five points or more with two gameweeks left.
Your GW38 Rotation Strategy: What I’m Actually Doing
I’m being honest here: I’m not rotating in GW38. Here’s why. With only one match per team left and final league positions determined by overall points (not average), you want every single starting XI slot to have your best player available, not your best fixture-adjusted player. Benching Gabriel, Virgil, or Haaland for an easier fixture alternative is basically self-sabotage at this stage.
My approach:
- Lock in: The 11 players with the highest recent form (last 3 games) and best fixtures. For me, that’s Haaland (captain), B.Fernandes, Gabriel, Semenyo, Virgil, and then mid-tier options like Tarkowski and Anderson who have high ownership but low price, allowing flexibility.
- Bench: One premium player with a tough fixture (e.g., Gabriel or someone facing Man City) and three low-cost enablers (Burnley/Leeds defenders who have easy fixtures but minimal expected output).
- Captain: Use our Captain Impact tool to identify the best captain choice. In GW38, Haaland remains the standout (62.5% owned, 27 goals), but B.Fernandes (form 11.5, 24 assists) is a viable differential captain if you’re chasing an advantage.
This is basically a hybrid: I’m not rotating, but I’m leveraging fixture difficulty to inform my bench selections and captaincy. It’s the 80/20 version of rotation strategy that actually works.
Key Takeaways: The Rotation Summary
- Fixture rotation only works in 3–4 GW blocks with mirrored fixture cycles. GW38 is simultaneous, so there’s nowhere to hide.
- The best defenders (Gabriel, Virgil) beat fixture rotations on form alone. Benching them is leaving points on the table.
- Goalkeeper rotation almost always fails because clean sheets correlate with team quality, not fixture difficulty, and rotation costs more in transfers than it gains.
- \”Set and forget\” strategies outperform rotation in most seasons because transfer fees and emotional decisions compound losses.
- Use rotation sparingly: only when you have two elite players with perfectly opposing fixtures and are willing to burn transfers.
- Override rotation if a player is in elite form or if rotation costs more than two transfers.
FAQs: Fixture Rotation Explained
Should I rotate my goalkeeper every week based on fixture difficulty?
No. Rotation costs 4 points per swap in transfer fees. Your keeper needs to work for six consecutive weeks just to break even. Pick the strongest defence (form-based) and hold them. Gabriel (209 pts) and Virgil (175 pts, form 8.0) are the gold standard — rotate out at your peril.
What’s the minimum fixture difficulty gap to justify rotating a defender?
At least 2 points (e.g., 2-difficulty vs 4-difficulty). A 1-point gap is noise and won’t overcome transfer costs. Also, both defenders must have similar recent form (within 1–2 points per game). If one has form 6.0 and the other 3.5, form dominates.
Is rotating defenders better than rotating midfielders?
Slightly, because defenders have more stable output (clean sheets, consistent bonus points). Midfielders have higher variance (hauls one week, blanks the next), making it harder to predict rotation gains. That said, the math still doesn’t work unless you have a 3+ GW clear fixture cycle.
Take Action Now
Check our Fixture Difficulty tool to see your squad’s upcoming fixtures and identify any genuine rotation opportunities. Then use the FPL360 Dashboard to track form and decide: are you really gaining 6+ points from rotation, or are you just burning transfers? If it’s the latter, hold your best players and move on.


