GPS vs Rangefinder

Voice Caddie T11 LT vs Voice Caddie Laser Fit

Get both. The T11 LT on your wrist, the Laser Fit in your pocket.

Entry A2026
Voice Caddie

Voice Caddie T11 LT

List price
$249.99
Type
GPS Watch
Weight
48g
Entry B2026
Voice Caddie

Voice Caddie Laser Fit

List price
$199
Max range
5–800 yards
Weight
4 oz

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The Specifications

Manufacturer data
Voice Caddie T11 LTVoice Caddie Laser Fit
Price (MSRP)$249.99$199Lower price
PAR AND PEG · EST 2026· HEAD TO HEAD · GOLF TECH ·
· The verdict ·

Get both. The T11 LT on your wrist, the Laser Fit in your pocket.

The Quick Verdict

This one depends on where your game needs the most help. If you want a full picture of every hole — hazards, green undulation, automatic scoring, course maps — the T11 LT is the better single device. It does a lot of things well, and at $250 it's the more capable tool for most rounds. But if you already know your home course and just want dead-accurate pin distance on approach shots, the Laser Fit at $199 earns its keep. And honestly? At $449 combined, these two make a genuinely good team — same brand, same app, and they serve completely different jobs in a round.


What They Actually Do

The T11 LT is a GPS golf watch — you strap it on before the round and it handles course mapping, hazard yardages, green views, and automatic shot tracking without you doing anything. The Laser Fit is a laser rangefinder — you point it at a target, press a button, and it tells you the exact distance. Both are legal in tournament play (with slope disabled on either), and both are Voice Caddie products that connect to the MyVoiceCaddie app.


The Real Tradeoffs

Precision vs. Convenience

The Laser Fit gives you ±1 yard to whatever you're pointing at — the flag, a bunker lip, a tree you're trying to fly. The T11 LT gives you front/center/back of the green, which is accurate enough for most decisions but not the same thing. If you're 165 yards out with a tucked back-right pin and there's trouble behind the green, knowing it's 172 to the pin vs. 168 to the center actually matters. The rangefinder handles that. The watch doesn't.

On everything else — tee shots, layups, figuring out how far to carry a hazard — the watch is faster and often more useful because you're not targeting a specific object. You're just reading the hole.

Speed of Use

Glance at your wrist vs. pull out the Laser Fit, find the flag in the viewfinder, hold steady, press the button, read the LED display, pocket it again. The watch wins on pace of play, every time. On a busy course where the group behind you is already on the tee, the T11 LT shows you yardages before you're even standing over the ball.

That said, the Laser Fit does measure in 0.1 seconds, so once you've got the target, it's instant. The slowdown is the targeting process, not the device itself.

What You See Before You Hit

This is where the T11 LT has an advantage that a rangefinder categorically cannot match. Standing on a tee box you've never seen — say, a 390-yard dogleg par 4 with a bunker complex at 230 on the left — the T11 LT shows you the hole layout, flags the hazard, and lets you plan your shot. The Laser Fit can't help here. There's nothing to point at until you already know what you're looking at.

The T11 LT also displays green undulation with a heat map and break direction arrows before you putt. The Laser Fit gives you distance to the hole. Those are solving totally different problems.

Information Depth

The T11 LT tracks your shots automatically, keeps score, shows you green contours, and gives you hazard yardages you didn't have to ask for. It's a round-management tool. The Laser Fit gives you one number — exact, reliable, and nothing else. Neither approach is wrong, but if you're someone who likes reviewing your round stats or wants the course map visible through the whole hole, the watch is the only device that does that.

Ecosystem & Pairing

Both are Voice Caddie products on the MyVoiceCaddie app. If you carry both in the same round, your shot data from the T11 LT and round history from the Laser Fit all live in the same place. These aren't designed as Bluetooth companions the way some Garmin pairs are — the Laser Fit doesn't relay its measurement to the watch — but they share the same brand infrastructure and app, which is worth something if you're already in the Voice Caddie ecosystem.

Cost of Ownership

The T11 LT is $250 with no subscription required, which is a real selling point at this tier. The Laser Fit is $199, USB-C rechargeable, and costs nothing ongoing. Combined: $449 and you're done. No annual fees on either side.

Tournament Legality

Both have slope mode and both have a way to disable it. The T11 LT has a tournament mode that turns off slope compensation. The Laser Fit has a physical slope switch. Either device is usable in competition — just make sure slope is off before your round.


Who Should Get Which

Get the T11 LT if you play a variety of courses and want navigation help, not just a number. If you like having shot tracking and automatic scoring without pulling out your phone, the watch handles your whole round from tee to green. It's also the better call if you're newer to GPS devices and want something that does more work for you.

Get the Laser Fit if you play the same few courses regularly, already know the layouts, and just want to know exactly how far it is to the pin. It's lighter than it sounds at 4 oz, the battery lasts 40+ rounds per charge, and there's nothing to learn — point, shoot, club up.

Get both if you're playing seriously and want the full picture. Use the T11 LT to manage the hole — check the map on the tee, track your shots, read the green contours before putting. Pull out the Laser Fit on approach shots when the exact pin distance actually changes your club selection. A lot of single-digit players do exactly this.


The Bottom Line

For most golfers choosing one: strap on the T11 LT and you've got a complete round-management tool with no subscription and 40,000 courses. But if you want the full package? Get both. The T11 LT on your wrist, the Laser Fit in your pocket.

See Also

· At a glance ·

Strengths & Weaknesses

Voice Caddie T11 LT
Strengths
  • Shows green contours/undulation for better putting reads
  • Affordable at $249.99 for a full-featured GPS
  • No subscription required for full functionality
Weaknesses
  • No fitness/health tracking despite watch form factor
  • Only 1-year warranty
  • No wind or weather data on device
Voice Caddie Laser Fit
Strengths
  • Ultra-compact at 4 oz — pocket-friendly
  • Dual-color display — easier to read in all lighting
  • USB-C rechargeable — no battery replacements
Weaknesses
  • Limited water resistance — not safe in heavy rain
  • No built-in cart magnet
  • No app connectivity or Bluetooth
· Frequently asked ·

Common questions

Which is better, the Voice Caddie T11 LT or the Voice Caddie Laser Fit?
For most golfers choosing one: strap on the T11 LT and you've got a complete round-management tool with no subscription and 40,000 courses. But if you want the full package? Get both.
What's the biggest difference between these products?
See the spec table above for a field-by-field comparison.
Which is the better pick overall?
The article body above gives a clear recommendation with reasoning.