The 7 Best Players for Vikings to Target in Free Agency

NFL free agency is 19 days away, and the Minnesota Vikings have nearly $60 million to spend, their most in years.

The 7 Best Players for Vikings to Target in Free Agency

Minnesota must also re-sign some allotment of its 25 free-agents-to-be, so the piggybank may shrink quickly unless general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah restructures existing players’ contracts.

Per the open market and increasing fan-driven sentiment, these are seven high-profile free agents to-be that Minnesota can chase, assuming the players’ current teams don’t re-sign them. They’re ranked in ascending order (No. 1 = best and most realistic free agent to pursue).

Note: The Vikings won’t sign all of these players.

7. Talanoa Hufanga (S)

Sergio Estrada-Imagn Images.

Hufanga conducted a down year by his standards, producing a 57.8 Pro Football Focus grade. He usually checks in at 70.0 or higher. Keep an eye on his price tag because it could diminish accordingly.

The man reached a Pro Bowl and earned All-Pro status not long ago (2022), and he’s a San Francisco 49er, the team that gave Adofo-Mensah his first NFL employment.

If Harrison Smith retires and Camryn Bynum leaves in free agency, Hufanga would look good in Brian Flores’ defense.

6. Will Fries (OG)

Gregory Fisher-USA TODAY Sports.

Fries produced a total breakout season in 2024, logging an 86.9 PFF grade.

The only catch? It was the first time in four seasons that Fries played better than mediocre.

Minnesota’s offensive line was exposed late in the season, and if the group subtracts Dalton Risner and Ed Ingram, Fries is a sensible replacement candidate.

5. Trey Smith (OG)

Morgan Tencza-USA TODAY Sports.

Smith is probably the most popular free agent among Vikings fans. Those fans watched as Minnesota allowed 9 sacks during its playoff loss in the Wildcard Round, the most in the history of the NFL playoffs. Smith is the best guard on the open market if the Chiefs don’t re-up for his services. He’s a two-time Super Bowl champion and reached his first Pro Bowl this season.

As a comparison, he’s as steady as Brian O’Neill per week-to-week performance.

Brace yourself, however — he’ll be spendy. His next deal will likely check in around $20 million per year. The only reason Smith doesn’t top this list is because a dozen other teams might pursue him.

It’s also worth noting that Smith and his OL teammates were totally disgraced in Super Bowl LIX — less than ideal for his free agency.

4. Jevon Holland (S)

Miami Dolphins safety Jevon Holland (8) reacts after receiving a fair catch in the fourth quarter during the football game between the New York Jets and host Miami Dolphins at Hard Rock Stadium on Sunday, January 8, 2023, in Miami Gardens, FL.

Jevon Holland might be the best safety in the NFL, and he’ll somehow hit free agency in three weeks.

Minnesota doesn’t need any safeties — it has Harrison Smith, Camryn Bynum, and Josh Metellus. But Smith could realistically retire, and Bynum is a free agent who is not guaranteed to return.

Thereafter, in that scenario, the Vikings would need a new starting safety, and defensive coordinator Brian Flores has ties to Holland from the 2021 Dolphins draft and season.

Holland has mentioned his positive relationship with Flores. He tweeted two years ago when Flores landed Minnesota’s defensive coordinator job: “Flo was apart of the reason I got drafted making my lifelong dream come true. I got nothing but love for him!”

That’s a sweet starting point for Vikings free agency if Adofo-Mensah is interested in Holland.

3. D.J. Reed (CB)

Shaun Brooks-Imagn Images.

Reed told Go Long‘s Tyler Dunne this in December, “I’m ready to go to free agency, bro. I’m ready to see what’s next for me.”

That sounds like a man ready to leave New York, and Minnesota needs a cornerback.

Reed routinely produces seasons with PFF scores north of 70.0 and 75.0. Minnesota can afford him, and he should be the primary free-agent target. Above all else, Minnesota must address cornerback for the long term this offseason. It’s mandatory.

2. Drew Dalman (C)

Rich Barnes-USA TODAY Sports.

Garrett Bradbury could become a salary cap casualty if the Vikings are serious about upgrading the offensive line’s interior.

Dalman is the best center available in free agency, accounting for a 78.8 PFF grade this season. And he’s not like Bradbury, who specializes in run blocking while struggling with pass protection. Dalman does both.

The only drawback? Several teams will pursue Dalman.

Dalman earns near top placement on this list because it would be pretty fantastic to start the J.J. McCarthy era at quarterback with one of the league’s best centers. Allowing Bradbury or a rookie to handle the assignment doesn’t feel smart.

The Vikings should be done with the era of facing an imposing defensive tackle (Dexter Lawrence or Kenny Clark, for example) and just knowing that Bradbury would be pummeled. Dalman is the answer.

1. Milton Williams (DT)

Joseph Maiorana-Imagn Images.

Williams stole headlines in the Super Bowl, accounting for 2 sacks and 2 tackles for loss.

His Eagles absolutely trampled the otherwise dynastic Chiefs, with Williams increasing his earning power along the way. Minnesota must strengthen the interior of its defensive line instead of signing players like Shamar Stephen, Armon Watts, and Jonathan Bullard over and over.

Williams became an elite pass-rushing DT in 2024, banking a remarkable 90.4 PFF mark via pass rush. That ranked second in the NFL behind Chiefs defensive tackle Chris Jones in 2024.

Minnesota can afford him if it boxes out other bidders.


Dustin Baker is a political scientist who graduated from the University of Minnesota in 2007. Subscribe to his daily YouTube Channel, VikesNow. The show features guests, analysis, and opinion on all things related to the purple team, with 4-7 episodes per week. His Vikings obsession dates back to 1996. Listed guilty pleasures: Peanut Butter Ice Cream, ‘The Sopranos,’ Basset Hounds, and The Doors (the band). He follows the NBA as closely as the NFL. 

All statistics provided by Pro Football Reference / Stathead; all contractual information provided by OverTheCap.com.