What They Have in Common
Both hit ±1 yard accuracy, both have slope modes you can switch off for tournament play, and both use OLED displays. Those are the things that actually matter for reading yardages on the course, and on those fundamentals, neither one embarrasses itself. Start there, then figure out what else you need.
Where They Differ
The Display and Optics
The V7 Shift runs a dual-color OLED — red for standard yardages, green when slope is active. That color-coded feedback is a small thing until you're trying to remember whether slope is on during a club championship. The PRO LX+ uses a red/black dual OLED, which is clean but doesn't give you that visual slope confirmation at a glance. The Shift also runs 6x magnification to the PRO LX+'s 7x, so Shot Scope technically pulls the target in closer. Whether you'll notice depends on your eyes and the course — at most yardages golfers actually use a rangefinder, 6x is plenty.
The Shift's "Slope First" design is worth noting: it's built around showing you the slope-adjusted number by default, then letting you toggle to flat yardage. That's a philosophical choice. Bushnell is betting you want the adjusted number most of the time. They're probably right.
Slope and Target Acquisition
Both have slope. The PRO LX+ calls theirs "adaptive slope," which seems like it's calibrating to gradient changes — but the input data doesn't break down how it differs mechanically from the Shift's implementation, so I won't pretend I know. What I can say is that Bushnell's PinSeeker with Visual Jolt is a well-established flagstick-lock system: you get a physical vibration when it locks on the pin. Shot Scope's data doesn't list an equivalent haptic feedback feature, which matters on longer approach shots when you're trying to confirm you've got the flag and not a tree behind it.
The GPS and Stats Layer
Here's where the products split hard. The PRO LX+ pairs with an H4 GPS attachment, covers 36,000 courses, and tracks up to 100 stats per round. If that sounds like a lot, it is. For golfers who actually use that data to improve — tracking greens hit, strokes gained, where your misses go — it's a genuinely useful layer on top of a rangefinder. For golfers who won't open the app after round three, it's $50 you paid for nothing.
The V7 Shift has Link connectivity, which ties into the Bushnell Golf app for yardage recall and some course features. It's a lighter ecosystem — designed around the rangefinder experience rather than full performance analytics.
Build and Battery
The Shift is IPX6 rated, which means it can take sustained water jets — useful if you play in real weather. The PRO LX+ is listed as "water-resistant" without a published IP rating, which is a vaguer promise. The Shift weighs 9 oz; Shot Scope doesn't publish weight or dimensions for the PRO LX+, which is a minor annoyance if you care about what you're clipping to your bag. The Shift runs on CR2 lithium batteries — they're at every pharmacy in the country, which matters more than it sounds when you're on hole 12 and the display dies.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Bushnell Tour V7 Shift if:
- You want a rangefinder that's clean, fast, and tournament-legal without fussing with settings
- You're the golfer who plays twice a week, wants confident yardages, and isn't going to dig into shot analytics afterward
- You play in lousy weather and want a real IP rating, not a vague "water-resistant" label
- You want the lock-on confirmation of Visual Jolt — especially useful when the flag is tucked and there are trees lurking behind the green
Get the Shot Scope PRO LX+ if:
- You're already tracking your game and want one device that handles laser ranging and GPS course data together
- You're a mid-handicap working on specific weaknesses — distance control, approach accuracy — and you'll actually look at 100 rounds of stats to find them
- You want 7x magnification and the extra pull-in matters for how you read distant targets
- You're committed to the Shot Scope ecosystem and the H4 GPS attachment makes sense alongside gear you already own
The Bottom Line
The V7 Shift is the tighter, more purpose-built rangefinder. It does one thing and does it well, with a better-defined IP rating, Visual Jolt confirmation, and a cleaner slope experience. The PRO LX+ costs $50 more and delivers genuine value in the GPS and stats layer — but only if you're going to use it. If you're the golfer who will open the app, review the data, and let it actually change how you practice, that extra fifty makes sense. If you're not that golfer — and most of us aren't, honestly — you're paying a premium for features that'll go dormant by week four.
Get the Bushnell Tour V7 Shift.
See Also