What They Have in Common
Both are budget-tier rangefinders with 6x magnification, slope mode with a legal switch for tournament play, and rechargeable batteries. They're both in the $170–$200 range, which means neither is a luxury purchase, but both are real rangefinders that will give you yardages every round. That's the baseline. The differences are where it gets interesting.
Where They Differ
Accuracy and Range
This is the one that matters most for actual on-course use. The PF260 Tour is rated to ±0.4 yards. The Laser Fit is rated to ±1 yard. Both are workable — you're not going to be off by five yards and blame the rangefinder — but a 0.4-yard tolerance is measurably tighter, and if you're the kind of golfer who cares about the difference between 147 and 148 yards into a tucked pin, it's not a trivial gap.
The range ceiling is also different: 1,100 yards for the PF260 Tour versus 800 yards for the Laser Fit. Most golfers don't need 800+ yards on a regular shot, but it matters for par-5 second shots, spotting hazards off the tee, or any course with long carries. The Laser Fit's 800-yard cap is fine for most rounds; it's not fine for every round.
Size, Weight, and Portability
The Laser Fit weighs four ounces and fits in your palm. Mileseey hasn't published weight or dimensions for the PF260 Tour, which makes a direct comparison tricky — but four ounces is legitimately light. Most standard rangefinders run 5–7 oz, so the Laser Fit is noticeably smaller than whatever you're used to. If you walk and carry, or if you hate rangefinders that feel like a chunky brick in your front pocket, the Laser Fit's form factor is a real differentiator.
Battery Life
The Laser Fit wins this one clearly. Eight hours or 40-plus rounds on a single USB-C charge is exceptional for a rangefinder. The PF260 Tour uses a removable rechargeable battery that lasts 2–3 rounds per charge. That's a meaningful gap — you could theoretically go a full month of weekend rounds without charging the Laser Fit. The PF260's removable battery has its own upside: you can carry a spare and swap it out if needed. But most people won't do that.
Display and Water Resistance
The PF260 Tour uses a transmissive LCD; the Laser Fit uses a dual-color LED display (red and black). In practice, LED displays can be sharper in certain lighting but may differ in how they perform in direct sunlight — neither display type is universally better, and without testing both side-by-side I wouldn't stake a claim either way. The IP54 rating on the PF260 Tour is a defined standard for dust and splash resistance. The Laser Fit is listed as "water-resistant" without a specific IP rating, which is a softer guarantee.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour if:
- You want the tighter accuracy number. The ±0.4-yard rating beats the Laser Fit's ±1 yard, and if you're dialing in wedge distances with any seriousness, that gap is real.
- You play courses with long par-5s or elevated tees where you're ranging 850+ yards. The 1,100-yard ceiling gives you headroom the Laser Fit doesn't.
- You want a defined water resistance rating. IP54 means something specific. "Water-resistant" doesn't.
- You're the golfer who plays 2–3 rounds a week and plugs in between. The 2–3 round battery life is genuinely fine if charging between rounds is already your habit.
Get the Voice Caddie Laser Fit if:
- You walk and carry, and every ounce matters. Four ounces is the lightest category of rangefinders — you'll feel the difference in your shorts pocket on the back nine.
- You forget to charge things. Forty-plus rounds on one charge means plugging it in is a once-a-season event. If you're the person who grabs the rangefinder out of the bag at the parking lot and prays it has juice, this battery changes your life.
- You're a 20-handicap who just needs to know it's 160 to the pin and club up. At that level, the accuracy gap between ±0.4 and ±1 yard doesn't affect your score.
- You want something that fits in a jeans pocket as easily as a phone. The Laser Fit is genuinely small in a way most rangefinders aren't.
The Bottom Line
These are close — same tier, $29 apart, same magnification. But the PF260 Tour has better accuracy, longer range, and a specific water resistance rating. The Laser Fit counters with dramatically better battery life and a size that's in a different league. Seems like Voice Caddie built the Laser Fit for golfers who want minimal bulk above everything else. If that's not you, the PF260 Tour's specs are stronger on the fundamentals.
I'd go with the PF260 Tour for most golfers. The accuracy advantage and IP54 rating feel more useful round-to-round than the size savings — unless you walk every round and already know you'd use a pocketable rangefinder more often.
Get the Mileseey PF260 Tour.