What They Have in Common
Both are water-resistant, slope-equipped rangefinders with a slope-switch for tournament compliance, 6x magnification, and ±1 yard accuracy. They're in the same tier for a reason — the core functionality is genuinely equivalent. You point, you shoot, you get a number. Neither is going to embarrass you on the course.
Where They Differ
Size, Weight, and Form Factor
The Laser Fit is legitimately small. Four ounces and 3.39 × 1.48 × 2.21 inches is closer to a TV remote than a traditional rangefinder. If you've ever used one of the older, chunkier units, you'll notice the difference immediately. The PRO L2's weight and dimensions aren't published by Shot Scope, so I can't give you a direct comparison number — but it's a conventional form factor rangefinder, and the Laser Fit is clearly designed around compactness as the headline feature. Whether that matters to you depends on how you carry it. Wedged in a front pocket during a walk? The Laser Fit wins. Strapped to a cart in a holder? Probably doesn't move the needle.
Battery and Charging
Here's a real difference. The PRO L2 runs on a standard battery (rated for approximately 5,800 measurements) while the Laser Fit uses a built-in USB-C rechargeable lithium battery rated for 8 hours or 40+ rounds. That's two very different relationships with power. The PRO L2 means you'll eventually need a CR2 battery — those are at every pharmacy in the country, which is nice when you're mid-round on a weekend trip and something dies. The Laser Fit means you're plugging it in the night before, same as your phone. Neither is obviously better; it depends on whether you're the type who forgets to charge things or the type who hates carrying spare batteries. Just know which type you are before you buy.
Display Technology
The Laser Fit uses a dual-color LED display (red and black), which Voice Caddie pairs with something they call their V-algorithm and a 0.1-second measurement claim. The PRO L2 uses an LCD. Honestly, display preference on rangefinders is personal — but dual-color LEDs tend to read cleanly in low light and shade, which is where most golfers actually look at their rangefinder. The LED setup on the Laser Fit seems like a genuine design choice rather than a gimmick, though I haven't tested it side-by-side with the PRO L2's LCD myself.
Price and the $49 Question
The PRO L2 is $149.99. The Laser Fit is $199. That $49 gap is real money at this tier. It's roughly a sleeve of premium balls, or it's the difference between buying the rangefinder and not sweating it. The Laser Fit charges that premium for the compact size and rechargeable battery. Whether that trade is worth it is the whole question.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Shot Scope PRO L2 if:
- You want a solid, no-fuss rangefinder and the $49 savings matters at this price point
- You prefer replaceable batteries — you travel for golf, play different courses, and don't want to think about charging
- You're buying your first dedicated rangefinder and want to try the category without spending near-$200
- You play in a cart most of the time and the cart magnet is actually useful to you
Get the Voice Caddie Laser Fit if:
- You walk 18 holes regularly and carry everything in your pockets — at 4 oz this genuinely disappears
- You're the 12-handicap who already charges your phone, earbuds, and GPS watch every night anyway; USB-C fits right into that routine
- The display matters to you: you tee off early on fall mornings when the light is low and you want something that reads clearly fast
- You've owned a basic rangefinder before and you know what you want — and what you want is smaller and rechargeable
The Bottom Line
These are close, and you won't get bad yardages out of either one. The PRO L2 does the job at a lower price with the flexibility of a replaceable battery. The Laser Fit costs more and earns it with a meaningfully smaller form factor and a clean charging setup — if those things fit how you actually play.
If you walk and you're already in a USB-C charging routine, the Laser Fit is worth the extra $49. If you ride a cart, play occasionally, or just want to spend less, the PRO L2 is the pick. I'd go with the PRO L2 for most golfers at this tier — the price is right and the battery situation is simpler — but the Laser Fit is a legitimate upgrade for walkers who care about pocket space.
Get the Shot Scope PRO L2.
See Also