UFC DFS Strategy Guide 2026 – How to Win on DraftKings & FanDuel

MMA · UFC DFS Strategy · 2026 DraftKings & FanDuel · Complete guide

UFC DFS Strategy Guide 2026

Everything you need to win at UFC and MMA daily fantasy on DraftKings and FanDuel — scoring, finish types, fighter stats, weigh-in strategy, Vegas odds, and cash vs GPP construction.

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How DraftKings MMA scoring works

DraftKings MMA scoring rewards fighters who are active, aggressive, and finish fights. Unlike other sports where volume alone drives fantasy points, MMA scoring has massive bonuses for finish method that can swing a fighter’s score by 50+ points in a single moment.

Win Bonuses
Win via KO/TKO+100 pts
Win via Submission+100 pts
Win via Decision+70 pts
Win via TKO (Doctor)+90 pts
Win via DQ+70 pts
Performance Scoring
Significant strike landed+0.5 pts
Significant strike absorbed−0.25 pts
Takedown landed+5 pts
Takedown absorbed−3 pts
Submission attempt+5 pts
Reversal/sweep+5 pts
Knockdown scored+10 pts
1-minute fight bonus+25 pts
5-minute fight bonus+6 pts
Key insight: The 1-minute finish bonus (+25 pts) is enormous. A fighter who wins by KO in under 1 minute scores approximately 125+ points before striking. This makes early finish upside the most valuable single variable in MMA DFS — far more impactful than in any other sport.
FanDuel scoring differences

FanDuel MMA scoring is simpler — it’s almost entirely based on fight outcome. Win bonuses are the primary driver, with a smaller emphasis on significant strikes. This makes FanDuel MMA more predictable and better for cash games where you want to target fighters most likely to win, rather than win in a specific high-activity way.

DraftKings rewards high-activity fighters even in losses — a fighter who loses a decision but lands 80 significant strikes can still outscore a passive winner on DraftKings. On FanDuel, losing fighters have almost no DFS value.

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Finish types and DFS value

How a fight ends determines 60-70% of a DFS fighter’s score. Understanding the DFS value of each finish type — and identifying which fighters are most likely to produce each outcome — is the core skill of MMA DFS.

KO/TKO Win
+100 pts
Highest ceiling. A KO win in round 1 with multiple knockdowns can score 130-150 points. Target power strikers with high KO rates vs chin-questionable opponents.
Submission Win
+100 pts
Equally valuable to KO. Grapplers with high submission rates get bonus points for every attempt even before the finish. Black belts vs opponents with poor takedown defense.
Decision Win
+70 pts
Lower ceiling but still strong floor. Decision fighters score on significant strikes throughout — a 3-round decision can add 60-80 points in performance scoring. Best for cash games.
Loss (Decision)
0 pts
On FanDuel — essentially zero value. On DraftKings — a highly active loser who lands 80+ significant strikes can still score 40+ points. Only viable in GPP as a unique play.
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Fighter stats that matter for DFS

Not all fighter stats are equally predictive for DFS. Here are the most important metrics to check before building your lineup — in order of importance:

Finish rate
The percentage of wins that come by KO, TKO, or submission. A fighter with a 75%+ finish rate is a DFS ceiling play. This is the single most important stat in MMA DFS — always check it first.
Significant strikes per minute (SLpM)
How many significant strikes a fighter lands per minute. Even in a decision loss, a fighter landing 8+ sig strikes per minute accumulates meaningful DFS points. High SLpM = high floor.
Takedown accuracy
What % of takedown attempts land. Each takedown is worth +5 pts. A wrestler averaging 3-4 takedowns per fight is worth 15-20 points in TDs alone before any strikes are added.
Submission attempts per fight
Each submission attempt scores +5 pts regardless of whether it succeeds. Aggressive grapplers who constantly hunt for submissions rack up points even in fights they don’t finish.
Opponent’s chin/submission defense
Matchup-specific. A power striker vs an opponent with 3 KO losses is a very different DFS proposition than a power striker vs a durable grappler. Opponent quality shapes ceiling.
Fight length history
Some fighters consistently end fights in round 1. Some drag fights to round 3 decisions. The 1-minute finish bonus (+25 pts) makes early finishers dramatically more valuable in GPP.
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Using Vegas odds for MMA DFS

Vegas odds are the most efficient probability market in combat sports. Before building any MMA DFS lineup, check the moneyline for every fight on the card. It tells you two critical things: win probability and implied salary value.

Heavy favorites (−250 and below)

Win probability above 70%. High floor, low ceiling. Great for cash games — stack heavy favorites from multiple fights. In GPP they are chalk and need pairing with contrarian plays.

Moderate favorites (−150 to −240)

The sweet spot for GPP. High enough win probability to justify rostering but not so heavy that 40%+ of the field has them. Look for moderate favorites with finish upside.

Dogs with finish upside (+150 to +250)

The GPP tournament winner usually has at least one upset. A +200 dog who wins scores the same 100 pts as a −300 favorite. Target dogs with genuine KO or submission paths to victory.

Heavy dogs (+300 and above)

Almost never worth rostering. Win probability below 25%. Only consider if there’s a specific path to victory (opponent is injured, size mismatch, known chin issues) with extremely low projected ownership.

Method of victory odds: Many sportsbooks post method of victory markets — KO/TKO, Submission, and Decision odds for each fighter. If Fighter A is −200 to win but +120 to win by KO specifically, the market is telling you a decision win is more likely. Use this to calibrate your finish upside expectations when building GPP lineups.

Weigh-in strategy

Weigh-ins are the most important pre-fight event for MMA DFS. They happen the day before the event and can completely change your lineup strategy. Three things to watch for:

Missed weight

If a fighter misses weight they are penalized 20% of their purse and the fight may be cancelled. More importantly — a fighter who missed weight by 5+ lbs is severely weakened from a brutal cut. Their opponent becomes a much stronger DFS play.

Came in heavy (close miss)

A fighter who came in just over the limit (0.5-1 lb) may have struggled with the cut but typically recovers well. Monitor Twitter/social for reports on how they looked at the ceremonial weigh-ins.

Came in light / effortlessly

A fighter who weighs in several pounds under the limit had an easy cut and will be fully recovered and potentially larger than usual on fight night. Look for fighters who came in significantly under limit — they often perform better.

Late scratches: MMA has a higher rate of last-minute fight cancellations than any other sport. Always do a final check on Twitter/X 30 minutes before the early prelim lock. A replacement fighter on one day’s notice is almost never a DFS play — but their opponent becomes a near-lock.
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Cash game construction

MMA cash games (50/50s, double-ups, head-to-head) reward consistency and correct winner prediction above all else. Your goal is to hit 70%+ of your fighters’ wins — not to find slate-breaking upside.

  • Stack heavy favorites — fighters who are −250 or better have 70%+ win probability. Hitting 4-5 heavy favorites in a 6-fighter cash lineup is the path to cashing consistently
  • Prioritize decision fighters — fighters who consistently go to decisions score reliably on significant strikes even if they don’t finish. High floor for cash
  • Avoid dogs entirely — in cash games a single upset blows your lineup. Dogs should only appear in GPP
  • Fade fighters coming off long layoffs — ring rust is real in MMA. A fighter returning after 18+ months carries more uncertainty than their odds suggest
  • Use the full salary cap — unlike other sports, leaving $500-$1,000 on the table in MMA DFS often means passing on a cheaper fighter who scores as well as a premium play
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GPP tournament construction

MMA GPP tournaments are won by correctly predicting 1-2 upsets that the field missed. Because DFS scoring is so top-heavy (a KO win is 100 pts vs a loss’s near-zero), a single wrong call can end a lineup’s GPP viability. GPP construction in MMA is fundamentally different from any other sport.

The 1 upset rule
Winning GPP lineups typically contain exactly 1 underdog who wins. Not 2-3 dogs — just 1. The rest of the lineup is usually correctly-picked favorites. Target dogs in the +150 to +250 range with genuine finish paths.
Ownership leverage
The chalk heavy favorite at 40%+ ownership who loses is an enormous GPP differentiator. If your lineup doesn’t have the 40% chalk, you automatically separate from a huge chunk of the field when they lose.
Main card vs prelims
Main card fighters are always more expensive and more heavily owned. Prelim fighters at salary minimums who win by finish can outscore main event fighters at twice the salary. Don’t ignore the prelims in GPP.
Multi-entry strategy
Run multiple lineups with different upset pivots. One lineup with the chalk favorite, one with the dog. This hedges your tournament exposure without requiring you to pick the exact outcome.
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Salary strategy

DraftKings MMA uses a $50,000 salary cap with 6 fighters. Unlike other sports where salary tiers are broad, MMA pricing is tightly compressed — the difference between the highest and lowest priced fighters is often only $4,000-$5,000. This means:

  • You can play almost any combination of fighters — the tight salary range means it’s rare to truly be priced out of a play you want
  • Value plays matter less than in other sports — a $7,000 MMA fighter and a $9,500 fighter often have similar upside if they both win by finish
  • Spend up on finish upside — if the highest-priced fighter on the card has the best KO path, pay up. The +100 finish bonus negates salary disadvantage instantly
  • Minimum salary fighters on prelims — prelim fighters often have minimum or near-minimum salaries. A $7,000 prelim fighter who wins by KO in round 1 scores 130+ points and is the best value play on the card

Where to play MMA DFS

DraftKings has the deepest MMA contest selection and the most favorable scoring for active fighters. FanDuel offers MMA contests with simpler win-based scoring that’s better for cash games. For a full comparison of platforms read our best DFS sites guide for 2026.

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