Contact
Getting a clear, useful answer to a fantasy football question depends almost entirely on asking a specific one. This page explains how to reach the team behind FantasyStartSit.com, what to include in a message to get the fastest possible response, and what to expect on the other end.
What to include in your message
A message that says "my tight end is disappointing" will sit in a queue for a while. A message that says "I'm deciding between Trey McBride and Sam LaPorta in a half-PPR league with a plus-matchup for both this week — what's the tiebreaker?" gets answered.
The difference isn't attitude — it's information. When reaching out about a start/sit question or a site-related issue, including these four things dramatically shortens the back-and-forth:
- The specific decision. Name the players, positions, or scenario in question.
- The scoring format. Standard, PPR, half-PPR, TE-premium, SuperFlex — each changes the calculus meaningfully.
- The league context. Redraft, dynasty, daily fantasy, best ball — these are genuinely different problems. A decision in a dynasty league weighs long-term value; a daily fantasy decision weights floor and ceiling differently than a season-long roster.
- What's already been considered. Mentioning "I've checked the injury report and both players are active" or "Vegas has this game at a 47.5 over" tells the responder where the conversation actually starts rather than recapping information already in hand.
For site feedback, bug reports, or content suggestions, the same logic applies: specific beats vague every time. A note that says "the kicker strategy page has a broken table on mobile at roughly the 600px breakpoint" is three times more useful than "something looks wrong on my phone."
Response expectations
Realistic expectations make for better interactions. Messages sent through the contact form are reviewed on weekdays, with a typical turnaround of 1–3 business days for most inquiries. During the NFL regular season — roughly September through January — volume increases, and the window can extend toward the longer end of that range.
Time-sensitive start/sit questions are better addressed through the site's content directly. The Start/Sit Decision Framework and position-specific pages like WR Start/Sit Strategy or RB Start/Sit Strategy are built precisely for the Tuesday-through-Sunday crunch that doesn't wait for email. If the question involves injury status, the Injury Report and Start/Sit page pulls the relevant framework together.
A quick breakdown of what gets a faster reply versus a slower one:
| Type of message | Typical response time |
|---|---|
| Specific player/matchup question with full context | 1–2 business days |
| General fantasy strategy question | 2–3 business days |
| Site bug report with device/browser detail | 1–2 business days |
| Partnership or licensing inquiry | 3–5 business days |
| Vague or incomplete inquiry requiring follow-up | Variable — expect a clarifying question first |
Additional contact options
Not every question needs a direct message. The site's reference library covers the most common start/sit scenarios in structured depth. Before sending a note, it's worth checking whether the answer already exists:
- Positional decisions by format: PPR vs. Standard Scoring Impact, Half-PPR Start/Sit
- Situational decisions: Bye Week Management, Playoff Push Start/Sit, Waiver Wire and Start/Sit
- Data and tools: Advanced Stats for Start/Sit, Expert Consensus Rankings, Vegas Lines and Game Totals
- Common decision errors: Start/Sit Common Mistakes, Recency Bias in Start/Sit
The FAQ page covers site-specific questions about how content is produced, updated, and organized. The How to Get Help page walks through the decision support resources in more detail for readers who aren't sure where to start.
How to reach this office
The primary contact method is the form below. It routes directly to the editorial team and is checked on every business day during the NFL season.
For general inquiries, content feedback, and factual correction requests, the form is the right channel. Factual corrections especially — if something on the site is wrong, outdated, or cites a source inaccurately, that's genuinely useful to hear and will be reviewed with priority.
Partnership inquiries, licensing questions, and media requests should use the same form with a clear subject line indicating the nature of the outreach. Those go to a separate queue and are reviewed weekly rather than daily.
There is no phone line. There is no live chat. Those aren't oversights — the content on this site is the product of careful, deliberate analysis, and that kind of work doesn't benefit from being interrupted every 40 minutes. The tradeoff is that written correspondence gets a more considered reply than a chat widget ever would.
Report a Data Error or Correction
Found incorrect information, an outdated fact, or a broken link? Use the form below.