FPL 2025/26 Review: The Highest Scoring Players From Every Club

The 2025/26 Fantasy Premier League season delivered plenty of surprises, with defenders dominating the scoring charts, several mid-priced midfielders emerging as elite value picks, and a few newly-promoted clubs producing unexpected heroes. Using the final FPL Total Points rankings we’ve picked out the top FPL performers from every Premier League club.

First, here’s the overall top 10 highest-scoring players in FPL for 2025/26.

Top 10 Overall FPL Point Scorers (2025/26)

RankPlayerClubPosPriceTSBTP
1HaalandMan CityFWD£14.7m62.5%239
2Bruno FernandesMan UtdMID£10.4m48.0%235
3GabrielArsenalDEF£7.3m45.4%209
4SemenyoMan CityMID£8.0m46.2%202
5Gibbs-WhiteNott’m ForestMID£7.6m9.2%188
6BowenWest HamFWD£7.8m17.5%187
7RiceArsenalMID£7.2m23.3%184
8ThiagoBrentfordFWD£7.2m30.2%181
9AndersonNott’m ForestMID£5.7m9.4%180
10GuéhiMan CityDEF£5.1m32.6%179

Arsenal

  1. Gabriel (DEF, £7.3m) – 209 pts
  2. Rice (MID, £7.2m) – 184 pts
  3. Timber (DEF, £6.3m) – 173 pts

Arsenal’s title-winning campaign translated brilliantly into FPL returns. Gabriel was arguably the premium defender of the season thanks to clean sheets and attacking threat, while Rice evolved into a genuine box-to-box FPL asset. Timber also enjoyed an outstanding campaign at both ends of the pitch.

Aston Villa

  1. Rogers (MID, £7.3m) – 169 pts
  2. Watkins (FWD, £8.7m) – 167 pts
  3. Martínez (GKP, £5.4m) – 141 pts

Morgan Rogers became one of the breakout stars of the season, combining creativity with goals at a modest price point. Watkins again proved reliable despite Villa balancing domestic football with their Europa League triumph, while Martínez remained a dependable goalkeeper option.

Bournemouth

  1. Senesi (DEF, £5.2m) – 175 pts
  2. Truffert (DEF, £4.8m) – 165 pts
  3. Evanilson (FWD, £6.5m) – 151 pts

Bournemouth’s defensive assets massively outperformed expectations. Senesi and Truffert delivered exceptional value thanks to clean sheets and bonus points, while Evanilson became a popular mid-priced striker.

Brentford

  1. Thiago (FWD, £7.2m) – 181 pts
  2. Kelleher (GKP, £4.8m) – 143 pts
  3. Damsgaard (MID, £5.6m) – 137 pts

Thiago became Brentford’s attacking focal point and one of the best-value forwards in the game. Kelleher rewarded patient managers with strong save volume, while Damsgaard quietly produced an excellent creative season.

Brighton

  1. Van Hecke (DEF, £4.7m) – 148 pts
  2. Verbruggen (GKP, £4.6m) – 130 pts
  3. Welbeck (FWD, £6.1m) – 122 pts

Brighton’s defence quietly produced strong value over the season, while Welbeck enjoyed another productive year when fit.

Burnley

  1. Anthony (MID, £5.0m) – 127 pts
  2. Flemming (FWD, £5.3m) – 99 pts

Burnley struggled overall but Anthony still emerged as a useful differential during patches of the campaign. Burnley simply did not produce enough viable FPL assets to justify a third inclusion.

Chelsea

  1. João Pedro (FWD, £7.4m) – 177 pts
  2. Enzo (MID, £6.5m) – 157 pts
  3. Palmer (MID, £10.6m) – 149 pts

Chelsea endured an inconsistent season but still produced several fantasy-relevant players. João Pedro was the standout, while Palmer still posted respectable returns despite Chelsea’s struggles.

Crystal Palace

  1. Lacroix (DEF, £5.2m) – 154 pts
  2. Muñoz (DEF, £5.9m) – 136 pts
  3. Henderson (GKP, £5.0m) – 128 pts

Palace’s defensive setup underpinned their run to the Conference League final. Defensive points and bonus accumulation made their back line highly valuable.

Everton

  1. Tarkowski (DEF, £5.8m) – 170 pts
  2. Garner (MID, £5.2m) – 159 pts
  3. Ndiaye (MID, £6.2m) – 144 pts

Everton’s defensive resilience again made Tarkowski an FPL machine, while Garner and Ndiaye consistently chipped in from midfield.

Fulham

  1. Wilson (MID, £5.8m) – 168 pts
  2. Andersen (DEF, £4.4m) – 123 pts
  3. Iwobi (MID, £6.4m) – 118 pts

Harry Wilson’s creativity and set-piece role drove Fulham’s attack, while Iwobi again proved a useful differential option.

Leeds United

  1. Calvert-Lewin (FWD, £5.8m) – 142 pts
  2. Stach (MID, £4.8m) – 137 pts
  3. Struijk (DEF, £4.3m) – 118 pts

Leeds exceeded expectations after promotion, with Calvert-Lewin rediscovering form and Struijk emerging as a strong budget defender.

Liverpool

  1. Virgil (DEF, £6.1m) – 175 pts
  2. Szoboszlai (MID, £7.1m) – 160 pts
  3. Mac Allister (MID, £6.3m) – 156 pts

Liverpool’s transition season still produced major FPL points. Virgil rolled back the years with elite defensive output, while Szoboszlai and Mac Allister controlled midfield. Salah still reached 123 points despite an underwhelming final campaign before departing the club.

Manchester City

  1. Haaland (FWD, £14.7m) – 239 pts
  2. Semenyo (MID, £8.0m) – 202 pts
  3. Guéhi (DEF, £5.1m) – 179 pts

Even in a season where City surrendered the title, Haaland remained the dominant FPL force. Semenyo’s explosive midfield campaign made him one of the best-value premium picks, while Guéhi anchored the defence impressively.

Manchester United

  1. Bruno Fernandes (MID, £10.4m) – 235 pts
  2. Casemiro (MID, £5.8m) – 165 pts
  3. Šeško (FWD, £7.4m) – 148 pts

United’s resurgence was reflected heavily in FPL scoring. Bruno Fernandes produced a historic campaign, while Šeško’s arrival added much-needed firepower.

Newcastle United

  1. Bruno G. (MID, £6.9m) – 154 pts
  2. Thiaw (DEF, £4.9m) – 126 pts
  3. Gordon (MID, £7.3m) – 118 pts

Bruno Guimarães remained Newcastle’s most reliable fantasy asset despite the club’s inconsistent season.

Nottingham Forest

  1. Gibbs-White (MID, £7.6m) – 188 pts
  2. Anderson (MID, £5.7m) – 180 pts
  3. Sels (GKP, £5.2m) – 146 pts

Forest massively outperformed expectations and their midfield pairing became one of the best-value combinations in FPL.

Spurs

  1. J.Palhinha (MID, £5.5m) – 126 pts
  2. Richarlison (FWD, £6.5m) – 119 pts
  3. Romero (DEF, £4.9m) – 104 pts

Spurs endured another miserable season near the relegation zone, but a handful of players still produced respectable returns.

Sunderland

  1. Mukiele (DEF, £4.6m) – 151 pts
  2. E.Le Fée (MID, £4.8m) – 147 pts
  3. Xhaka (MID, £5.3m) – 129 pts

Sunderland’s first season back in the Premier League was a huge success, and their budget assets became useful enablers throughout the year.

West Ham

  1. Bowen (FWD, £7.8m) – 187 pts
  2. M.Fernandes (MID, £5.5m) – 135 pts
  3. Wan-Bissaka (DEF, £4.1m) – 118 pts

Despite relegation, Jarrod Bowen still delivered elite fantasy output and remained one of the most explosive forwards in the game.

Wolves

  1. J.Gomes (MID, £5.3m) – 107 pts
  2. André (MID, £5.2m) – 96 pts

João Gomes at least offered occasional value in midfield. Too poor a side to produce a meaningful third fantasy asset, which ultimately reflected their struggles at the bottom of the table.

The above player prices are their final FPL season-ending price. Check out FISO’s FPL forum for more discussion about the 25/26 season and related FPL side-games.

Before the return of the Premier League in August, fantasy football fans have the World Cup to look forward to starting in the middle of June.