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Head to Head

Updated May 14, 2026 from live stats

George Kittle vs Kyle Pitts

Fantasy Football Comparison for the 2026 NFL Season

The Bottom Line

George Kittle is the better fantasy play this season.

George Kittle is the better play on a neutral week. 12.1 PPG with 625 yards gives a reliable baseline. Kyle Pitts at 9.8 PPG is not far behind and could win specific weeks where matchup and game script align. Draft George Kittle higher, but do not fade Kyle Pitts entirely.

Moderate confidence: stats favor the leader, but matchup variance could flip this weekly.

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TESan Francisco 49ers#3PPG LEADER
George Kittle
PPG
12.1
Games
11
Rec
57
Rec Yds
628
Rec TDs
7
Targets
69
Bye
Week 14
TEAtlanta Falcons#6
Kyle Pitts
PPG
9.8
Games
17
Rec
88
Rec Yds
928
Rec TDs
5
Targets
118
Bye
Week 5

The Edge Chart

VolumeEfficiencyTD UpsideFloorCeilingDurability
George Kittle
Kyle Pitts

Head to Head

12.1 PPG9.8 PPG
11 GP17 GP
Bye: Week 14Bye: Week 5

Fantasy Tiers

George Kittle: Tier 1 (Elite) TE (ranked #3 at the position). Kyle Pitts: Tier 2 (Strong Starter) TE (ranked #6 at the position). Among the top 30 tight ends this season, George Kittle is producing at 55% of elite pace and Kyle Pitts at 45%. These two are close enough in the rankings that weekly matchup should dictate your start.

George Kittle vs Kyle Pitts: Who Should You Start?

If you are choosing between George Kittle and Kyle Pitts for your lineup, you are not alone. George Kittle finished the 2025 season at 12.1 PPG for the San Francisco 49ers (11 games), and Kyle Pitts averaged 9.8 for the Atlanta Falcons (17 games).

That 2.3-point weekly advantage for George Kittle is meaningful but not automatic. Fantasy football is a week-to-week sport, and the answer to "who should I start" often changes based on opponent, recent form, and game environment. Season averages set the baseline; weekly context makes the call.

Kyle Pitts is the volume tight end in this matchup with 88 receptions for 928 yards, while George Kittle profiles as a more touchdown-dependent spike play (7 scores on 57 catches). In weeks where George Kittle finds the end zone he out-scores Kyle Pitts, but the floor gap is real.

George Kittle has his bye in Week 14, and Kyle Pitts rests in Week 5. Managers rostering both need waiver wire depth at tight end for those two weeks, and that is exactly the kind of planning DraftCall's matchup engine surfaces automatically so you are not scrambling on a Sunday morning.

Trade Value + Dynasty Outlook

Both are in a similar trade value range. A straight swap would be fair in most leagues, with the tiebreaker going to whichever manager values schedule or bye week more. Dynasty outlook: George Kittle (age 32) is in the later years of production. Still a redraft asset, but dynasty value is declining. Kyle Pitts (age 25) has years of prime production ahead. Buy-and-hold dynasty asset.

Did You Know?

  • George Kittle outscored Kyle Pitts by a projected 39 total fantasy points over a full 17-game season.
  • Kyle Pitts played 17 games in 2025 compared to George Kittle's 11. That durability gap means Kyle Pitts contributed more total fantasy points even before you look at per-game averages.
  • George Kittle scored 7 total touchdowns in 2025 (0.6 per game), making him one of the more reliable scoring options at tight end.
  • Kyle Pitts saw 118 targets in 2025. Target volume is the single strongest predictor of weekly PPR production at the tight end position.
  • Kyle Pitts is 7 years younger than George Kittle (25 vs 32), which significantly impacts dynasty league trade value.
Detailed Stat Breakdown
StatKittlePitts
PPG (Half-PPR)12.19.8
Games Played1117
Total Fantasy Pts (est.)133167
Receptions5788
Rec/Game5.25.2
Receiving Yards628928
Rec Yds/Game57.154.6
Receiving TDs75
Targets69118
Target Share/Game6.36.9
Age3225
Experience8 yrs4 yrs
Bye WeekWeek 14Week 5

Summary

The 2025 numbers favor George Kittle at 12.1 PPG, 2.3 points per game above Kyle Pitts's 9.8. But season stats only tell part of the story. DraftCall's AI factors in weekly matchup, recent form, and injury status to give you a verdict that updates with the latest data.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Should I start George Kittle or Kyle Pitts in fantasy football?

Based on 2025 season averages, George Kittle has the edge at 12.1 PPG compared to Kyle Pitts's 9.8 PPG. However, the best start depends on weekly matchup, recent form, and injury status. DraftCall's app provides real-time AI-powered verdicts that factor in all of these variables.

How many fantasy points did George Kittle and Kyle Pitts average in 2025?

George Kittle averaged 12.1 fantasy points per game (half-PPR) across 11 games in 2025. Kyle Pitts averaged 9.8 PPG over 17 games. That is a difference of 2.3 points per game.

When are George Kittle and Kyle Pitts's bye weeks in 2026?

George Kittle (SF) has a bye in Week 14, and Kyle Pitts (ATL) has a bye in Week 5. Plan your roster accordingly if you are carrying both players.

Is George Kittle or Kyle Pitts a better fantasy tight end in 2026?

George Kittle outscored Kyle Pitts by 2.3 PPG in 2025, which gives him the edge heading into 2026. For a week-by-week verdict, DraftCall's AI analyzes matchup quality and recent trends in real time.