FFPC Scoring Calculator
Fantasy Football Players Championship scoring: 6-pt passing TDs, 0.5 PPR, and TE premium (1.0 pt per TE reception).
What makes FFPC scoring different
FFPC uses three rules that deviate from standard fantasy scoring. Understanding each one changes how you should value players in any FFPC contest.
1. 6-point passing touchdowns. Most casual leagues use 4-point passing TDs. FFPC gives QBs 6 points per passing TD — the same value as rushing or receiving TDs. This significantly boosts QB scoring. A QB with 35 passing TDs earns 70 extra points over a full season vs a 4-pt TD league.
2. 0.5 PPR (half-PPR). All skill positions earn 0.5 points per reception. This is the same as half-PPR in any other context and boosts pass-catching players over pure rushers.
3. TE premium. Tight ends earn an additional 0.5 pts per reception on top of the half-PPR bonus — so each TE catch is worth 1.0 point total. An elite TE with 100 catches in a season earns 100 reception points vs 50 points in a standard half-PPR league. This makes the TE position a genuine first-round consideration in FFPC drafts.
FFPC vs other scoring formats
| Rule | FFPC | Half-PPR | Full PPR | Standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Passing TD | 6 pts | 4 pts | 4 pts | 4 pts |
| RB/WR reception | 0.5 pts | 0.5 pts | 1.0 pts | 0 pts |
| TE reception | 1.0 pts | 0.5 pts | 1.0 pts | 0 pts |
| Rush/rec yards | 1/10 yds | 1/10 yds | 1/10 yds | 1/10 yds |
| Rush/rec TD | 6 pts | 6 pts | 6 pts | 6 pts |
| Interception | -2 pts | -2 pts | -2 pts | -2 pts |
FFPC scoring FAQs
What is FFPC scoring?
FFPC (Fantasy Football Players Championship) scoring uses standard NFL scoring with three key differences: (1) 6-point passing touchdowns instead of 4, (2) 0.5 PPR for all skill positions, and (3) a TE premium — tight ends earn 1.0 point per reception instead of 0.5. This combination makes TEs significantly more valuable than in standard or half-PPR leagues.
What is the TE premium in FFPC?
The TE premium gives tight ends an additional 0.5 points per reception on top of the standard 0.5 PPR bonus, making each TE reception worth 1.0 total points. This makes elite tight ends (those with 70–100 catches per season) significantly more valuable in FFPC leagues compared to half-PPR formats.
How does FFPC compare to standard and PPR scoring?
FFPC sits between half-PPR and full PPR for most positions. The 6-point passing TD format boosts QB values vs standard (4-pt TD) leagues. The TE premium specifically inflates elite tight end value above any standard format. For RBs and WRs, FFPC scores are identical to a half-PPR league.
What are FFPC leagues?
FFPC (Fantasy Football Players Championship) is one of the largest high-stakes fantasy football competitions in the United States, running multiple tournament formats with prize pools up to $1 million+. All FFPC contests use their proprietary scoring format: 6-pt passing TDs, 0.5 PPR, and TE premium.
