What They Have in Common
Both are USB-C rechargeable, both shoot to ±1 yard accuracy, both offer 6x magnification, and both have slope with a legal switch to turn it off for tournament play. You'll toggle that slope switch off the night before your club championship. You'll probably forget at least once. That shared baseline is solid — neither is going to embarrass you on an approach shot.
Where They Differ
Build Quality and Features
The Titan Elite is built like it's meant to survive. IP67 waterproofing means it can be submerged in a meter of water — not that you're likely to test that, but it means rain and morning dew aren't a concern. The aluminum shell adds to that confidence. It also has a MagLock magnet for cart attachment, a visual target lock indicator, and pulse vibration confirmation when it locks on. That last one matters more than people expect: on a busy background, knowing you actually hit the flag instead of the trees behind it takes a small bit of mental load off.
The Laser Fit, by contrast, is just "water-resistant" — which is fine for most rounds, but you probably wouldn't want to use it in a proper downpour. What it lacks in weather rating, though, it makes up for in sheer portability.
Size and Weight
Four ounces. The Laser Fit weighs four ounces and fits in a pants pocket without you noticing it. Its dimensions — roughly 3.4 by 1.5 by 2.2 inches — are genuinely small. If you walk, carry your bag, or just hate clipping anything to your belt loop, that matters. Most rangefinders in this category feel like a chunky monocular; the Laser Fit doesn't. That's not nothing, especially over 18 holes.
The Titan Elite doesn't publish its weight or dimensions, which is a common move when the numbers aren't a selling point. Probably safe to assume it's on the heavier side for a device with an aluminum housing.
GPS, App Integration, and Find My
Here's where the Titan Elite pulls well ahead in feature count. It connects to the Precision Pro app, which adds GPS-based front/middle/back yardages and full mapping — so it's functioning as both a laser and a GPS device. It also has a Find My feature, which lets you locate the device if you set it down on the cart and drive off. That's increasingly common in premium rangefinders and genuinely useful.
The Laser Fit has none of that. No GPS, no app, no connectivity. It also uses a dual-color LED display rather than HD glass optics — red for the main read, black for secondary info. That's a different visual experience than the Titan Elite's traditional optical viewfinder. Call it a hunch, but the HD glass on the Titan Elite will feel more comfortable to golfers used to traditional rangefinders.
Value and What You're Actually Paying For
The Laser Fit costs $199. The Titan Elite costs $399. That gap is real, and it basically equals the Laser Fit plus a round of golf with a cart. If you're buying the Titan Elite, you're paying for the GPS app layer, the aluminum build, IP67, and the MagLock — on top of the core laser function. If you don't use GPS yardages and you play somewhere dry, you're buying a lot of features you won't touch.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite if:
- You already use a rangefinder but also want GPS course mapping without carrying two devices
- You play in variable conditions — early-morning rounds, coastal courses, anywhere that rangefinder meets actual weather
- You want a device that feels premium in-hand for the long term; the 3-year warranty backs that up
- You're the type who clips a rangefinder to the cart every round and would genuinely appreciate a MagLock and a Find My feature
Get the Voice Caddie Laser Fit if:
- You carry your bag and want a rangefinder that disappears into your pocket — the kind of golfer who hates extra gear
- You're a newer player who wants accurate yardages without paying $400 for features you're not ready to use
- You want a solid, accurate laser at a price where losing or breaking it doesn't ruin your week
- You play casual rounds at the same few courses and GPS mapping isn't something you've ever felt you needed
The Bottom Line
If budget isn't the constraint, the Titan Elite is the better rangefinder in almost every measurable way. But the Laser Fit is genuinely impressive for $199 — accurate, rechargeable, light enough that you'll actually take it out every round. The $200 gap is real, and if you don't need GPS integration or IP67 waterproofing, you'd be paying for things you won't use. My pick is the Titan Elite for golfers who want one device that does it all. But if you're buying a laser and nothing else, the Laser Fit earns it.
Get the Precision Pro Titan Elite.
See Also