What They Have in Common
Both use 7x magnification with Shot Scope's dual red/black OLED display, measure to ±1 yard accuracy out to 900 yards, and run on the same battery for roughly 5,800 measurements. Both have slope, a strong magnet mount, and water resistance. The core rangefinder experience — picking a flag, getting a number, moving on — is identical.
Where They Differ
The H4 GPS Module Changes Everything
Here's the thing: the PRO LX+ isn't just a rangefinder with a GPS chip inside — it ships with Shot Scope's H4 GPS device that physically attaches to it. That module gives you access to 36,000 mapped courses, front/middle/back distances, and hazard info without needing your phone. If you already carry a separate GPS unit or rely on a course app, you're paying $100 for something you mostly have. But if you don't have a standalone GPS device, the LX+ is essentially bundling two purchases into one.
Shot Tracking and the 100-Stat Ecosystem
The PRO LX+ adds automatic shot tracking and access to Shot Scope's stat platform — reportedly around 100 metrics covering everything from driving distance to strokes gained by zone. That's a meaningful feature if you're the kind of golfer who actually reviews data between rounds and adjusts your practice accordingly. If you play twice a month, enjoy it, and lose three sleeves of balls in the process, you probably won't open the app. Honest.
The PRO LX doesn't have shot tracking. What it does have is a pulse vibration confirmation and rapid-fire detection — features the LX+ spec doesn't list. That's worth noting. The PRO LX might actually give you more tactile feedback and faster target acquisition in a pure laser-to-flag workflow. Seems like Shot Scope made a deliberate trade-off: the LX is optimized for rangefinding, the LX+ is optimized as a platform.
Slope: Same Tech, Same Functionality
Both offer adaptive slope with a legal switch for tournament play. No meaningful difference here — you get the same slope-adjusted yardage either way. You'll toggle it off for your club championship and probably forget to toggle it back on for Saturday's casual round. That's not a Shot Scope problem, that's just how slope switches work.
Who Should Buy Which
Get the Shot Scope PRO LX if:
- You want a rangefinder and only a rangefinder — fast, accurate, no extra functions to manage on the course
- You already have a GPS watch or device you're happy with and don't need to duplicate that functionality
- You're a 15-handicap who wants to know the pin is 147 yards, hit the shot, and move on — not review your club selection tendencies next Tuesday
- The $100 matters. That's a green fee at a lot of courses, and the core rangefinder experience between these two is genuinely the same
Get the Shot Scope PRO LX+ if:
- You don't currently own a GPS device and want one less thing in your bag — the H4 attachment pulls double duty so you're not carrying a separate unit
- You're actively working on your game and will actually use 100 stats; the 12-handicap who spent last winter on TrackMan and wants to see if the improvement is showing up on-course, for instance
- You want everything in one ecosystem — one battery (sort of), one device, one app for your distance and your data
The Bottom Line
These two are genuinely close. The rangefinder underneath is identical, so this isn't a question of which one shoots better — it's a question of whether $100 buys you something you'll use. If you're buying your first GPS device or want shot-tracking data you'll actually review, the PRO LX+ earns the premium. If you have GPS covered or just want a no-fuss laser, spending an extra hundred dollars for features you won't open is hard to justify. I'd take the PRO LX, because a rangefinder that does one thing very well is underrated — and the money stays in your pocket.
Get the Shot Scope PRO LX.
See Also