The 2025 NFL regular season is now over, which means it’s time to turn our attention to postseason PFF Awards and the PFF All-Pro team.
We’re doing things a bit differently this year, with the honors decided by a voting panel of PFF’s senior analysts using PFF grading and advanced metrics, and there’s no better time to dive in with less than a week left to take advantage of PFF’s holiday sale using promo code HOLIDAY30.
Here is the 2025 PFF All-Pro Team.
Offense
QB:Matthew Stafford,Los Angeles Rams
(Second Team:Drake Maye, New England Patriots)
There were only two true contenders for this spot in the eyes of our voters, but Stafford won out after the best season of his career. He finished the 2025 regular season leading all quarterbacks in PFF passing grade (93.3), and his 7.4% PFF big-time throw rate was also the best in the league.
RB:Bijan Robinson,Atlanta Falcons
(Second Team:De'Von Achane,Miami Dolphins)
Robinson led all players at the position in missed tackles forced on rushing attempts, with 86, 19 more than the next-best running back. He also ranked inside the top five in yards per attempt, PFF grade, yards after contact per attempt and runs of 10 or more yards.
FB:Reggie Gilliam, Buffalo Bills
(Second Team:Patrick Ricard,Baltimore Ravens)
There aren’t many players who line up at the fullback spot often these days, but Gilliam was the best of that group in 2025. He led all fullbacks in PFF run-blocking grade (73.5) and didn’t allow any pressures on 24 pass-blocking snaps.
WR:Puka Nacua, Los Angeles Rams
WR:Jaxon Smith-Njigba,Seattle Seahawks
WR:Amon-Ra St. Brown, Detroit Lions
(Second Team: Ja’Marr Chase,Cincinnati Bengals;George Pickens,Dallas Cowboys;Nico Collins,Houston Texans)
Nacua led all wide receivers in yards per route run at 3.71, and Smith-Njigba was right behind him at 3.62. They were so far ahead of the rest of the league that the gap between Smith-Njigba and Luther Burden III in third place matched the gap between Burden and Garrett Wilson of the New York Jets, who ranked 29th in that metric.
St. Brown ranked third among all receivers in PFF receiving grade (90.6), marking the fourth straight year he has posted a grade above 90.0.
TE: Trey McBride,Arizona Cardinals
(Second Team:George Kittle,San Francisco 49ers)
No tight end in the NFL saw more opportunities than McBride, who led the position in receptions (126), 38 more than the next-best tight end, and receiving yards (1,239), 311 more than Kyle Pitts in second place. He dropped just 0.8% of catchable passes thrown his way, the sixth-best rate among tight ends with 30 or more targets.
LT:Garett Bolles,Denver Broncos
(Second Team:Tristan Wirfs,Tampa Bay Buccaneers)
Bolles was the only offensive tackle in football to play 300 or more snaps and earn a pass-blocking grade above 90.0. He allowed just 19 pressures on 714 pass-blocking snaps in the regular season and was also the only left tackle in the NFL to log 300 or more pass-blocking snaps without surrendering a sack.
LG:Joe Thuney,Chicago Bears
(Second Team:Quenton Nelson,Indianapolis Colts)
The leader among guards in PFF pass-blocking grade, Thuney did not allow a sack on 686 pass-blocking snaps this season. His run-blocking grade ranked 19th at the position, but his strength as a pass protector is what earned him a first-team spot here.
C:Creed Humphrey,Kansas City Chiefs
(Second Team:Aaron Brewer, Miami Dolphins)
Humphrey led all centers in PFF grade (88.8) and was the only player at the position to earn PFF grades above 80.0 as both a run blocker and a pass protector. He allowed just eight pressures during the regular season, the only center to allow single-digit pressures while playing at least 300 pass-blocking snaps.
RG:Quinn Meinerz, Denver Broncos
(Second Team:Chris Lindstrom, Atlanta Falcons)
The only guard to earn a 90.0-plus PFF grade during the regular season, Meinerz was far from perfect in pass protection, ranking 19th among guards in PFF pass-blocking grade (70.9), but he dominated as a run blocker. His PFF run-blocking grade (92.1) led all guards and ranked third among all offensive linemen.
RT:Penei Sewell, Detroit Lions
(Second Team:Darnell Wright, Chicago Bears)
Sewell led all offensive linemen in PFF grade (95.2), driven largely by a dominant season as a run blocker. His PFF run-blocking grade (96.8) also led all offensive linemen and was 4.0 points higher than the next-best offensive tackle. He was solid in pass protection as well, earning a PFF pass-blocking grade (80.3) that ranked 10th at the position.
Defense
EDGE:Myles Garrett,Cleveland Browns
EDGE:Will Anderson Jr., Houston Texans
(Second Team:Aidan Hutchinson, Detroit Lions;Micah Parsons,Green Bay Packers)
After a historically good season in which he set a new single-season record with 23 sacks, Myles Garrett was the obvious choice for one of the top spots on the All-Pro team. He led the position in PFF grade (92.7) and PFF pass-rush grade (93.3), though Anderson finished ahead of him in PFF pass-rush win rate (26.2%) during the regular season.
DI:Cameron Heyward,Pittsburgh Steelers
DI:Jeffery Simmons,Tennessee Titans
(Second Team:Quinnen Williams, Dallas Cowboys;Kobie Turner, Los Angeles Rams)
Heyward was the only interior defender to earn a 90.0-plus PFF grade this season and the only player at the position to post PFF grades above 80.0 as both a pass-rusher and a run defender. Simmons made his biggest impact as a pass-rusher, leading the position in PFF pass-rush grade (91.4) while ranking second in total pressures (64).
LB: Zach Baun,Philadelphia Eagles
LB:Jack Campbell, Detroit Lions
LB:Devin Lloyd,Jacksonville Jaguars
(Second Team:Demario Davis,New Orleans Saints;Devin Bush, Cleveland Browns;Cedric Gray, Tennessee Titans)
In just his third season in the league, Campbell was the only linebacker to earn a PFF grade above 90.0 while playing 400 or more snaps, with only Fred Warner of the San Francisco 49ers grading higher on a smaller sample size. Zack Baun led all linebackers with 200 more coverage snaps in PFF coverage grade (85.9), while Lloyd earned PFF grades above 80.0 in coverage, against the run and as a pass-rusher.
CB:Devon Witherspoon, Seattle Seahawks
CB:Sauce Gardner, Indianapolis Colts
(Second Team:Quinyon Mitchell, Philadelphia Eagles;Mike Jackson,Carolina Panthers)
Witherspoon led all cornerbacks in PFF grade (89.9) and made an impact in coverage, against the run and on blitzes, earning PFF grades above 80.0 in all three areas. While Sauce Gardner ranked 11th at the position in PFF coverage grade (75.6), he finished the season with the NFL’s top lockdown rate.
S:Kyle Hamilton, Baltimore Ravens
S:Jalen Pitre, Houston Texans
(Second Team:Derwin James,Los Angeles Chargers;Antonio Johnson, Jacksonville Jaguars)
The Ravens asked Kyle Hamilton to save their defense by changing his role for the second year in a row. And for the second year in a row, it worked. He ranked third at the position in PFF grade (85.9) and excelled across multiple roles. Pitre ranked second among all safeties in PFF run-defense grade (88.1) and led the position in combined interceptions and pass breakups (10).
Slot: CBCooper DeJean, Philadelphia Eagles
(Second Team: CBJa'Quan McMillian, Denver Broncos)
The best slot cornerback in football, DeJean led all players in the NFL in PFF advanced coverage grade and led all slot cornerbacks in PFF coverage grade (79.0). He recorded two interceptions and 12 pass breakups on 80 targets into his coverage while allowing a completion rate of just 63.8%.
Special Teams
K:Brandon Aubrey, Dallas Cowboys
(Second Team:Will Reichard,Minnesota Vikings)
P:Daniel Whelan, Green Bay Packers
(Second Team:Austin McNamara, New York Jets)
LS:Rex Sunahara, Cleveland Browns
(Second Team:Hogan Hatten, Detroit Lions)
ST:Devon Key, Denver Broncos
(Second Team: Carson Bruener, Pittsburgh Steelers)
KR:Kene Nwangwu,New York Jets
(Second Team:Ray Davis,Buffalo Bills)
PR:Isaiah Williams, New York Jets
(Second Team:Marcus Jones,New England Patriots)