Arccos Launches “The Smartest Rangefinder In Golf”
Golf Technology

Arccos Launches “The Smartest Rangefinder In Golf”

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Arccos Launches “The Smartest Rangefinder In Golf”

Arccos just dropped what could be the most significant advancement in rangefinder technology since the introduction of slope compensation. The Arccos Smart Laser Rangefinder promises to deliver golf’s most precise “plays like” distance by automatically adjusting for a comprehensive menu of environmental factors that go well beyond the slope calculations we’ve grown accustomed to.

But here’s the thing: this next-level precision comes with a catch that could be a deal-breaker for many golfers.

Beyond slope: The environmental revolution

Arccos Smart Laser Features

While traditional rangefinders with slope adjustment factor in elevation changes, the Arccos Smart Laser goes significantly deeper. We’re talking real-time adjustments for wind speed and direction (including gusts), temperature, humidity and altitude—all combined with precise GPS positioning across more than 40,000 mapped courses worldwide.

“We’ve taken something that is actually super-complicated and presented it in an immediately actionable way,” says Sal Syed, Arccos CEO and Co-Founder.

The concept is compelling. Instead of getting a basic yardage and trying to calculate environmental adjustments in your head (or ignoring them entirely), the Smart Laser does the heavy lifting. The display provides the actual distance, the “plays like” number, and even upper and lower bounds when wind gusts are factored in.

For golfers seeking maximum precision—those who already obsess over every environmental variable—this could be an absolute game-changer. A more complete picture of real-time conditions could eliminate much of the guesswork that separates good yardage management from great yardage management.

Arccos smart laser data details

Software first, hardware second

What sets the Arccos approach apart, according to Syed, is that the Smart Laser was “built as a software product first.” While competitors start with hardware and backfill software capabilities, Arccos leveraged its massive dataset—25 million rounds, 1.3 billion shots, 3.9 trillion data points—to create a rangefinder architected around intelligence rather than optics alone.

The integration is seamless for existing Arccos users. The rangefinder syncs instantly with the Arccos app and automatically sets pin locations for game-tracking members, eliminating manual input while improving approach and putting statistics accuracy.

Over-the-air software updates promise the device will continue evolving with new features and improved algorithms. Arccos is already working with The Weather Channel for hyperlocal gust forecasts and exploring golf ball-specific adjustments for even more precise recommendations.

Arccos Smart Laser app display

The subscription reality

Here’s where things get complicated. Modern software is typically delivered as a service and the Smart Laser follows that model. Want to keep your rangefinder as smart as the day you bought it? You’ll need an active Arccos Game Tracking and Smart Laser subscription.

The introductory price is $299.99, which includes one year of the Smart Laser subscription. After that, it’s $16.67 per month (billed annually at $200). There’s also a bundle option at $449.99 that includes Smart Sensors and both subscriptions.

That pricing puts the Smart Laser in mid-tier territory—less expensive than premium units from Mileseey and Bushnell’s top offerings, but significantly more than entry-level options. The ongoing subscription cost, however, could be a non-starter for many golfers.

arccos smart laser bite mount

The fundamental question

Ultimately, regardless of bells and whistles, the Arccos Smart Laser needs to be a competent rangefinder. That means accurate and fast pin acquisition in any conditions, exactly where premium units differentiate themselves from entry-level and mid-tier options.

If you play in rain or fog, you know how much that matters.

Arccos has built its reputation on the premise that the most important data in golf is on-course data, and the Smart Laser represents another step in building their data-driven tech ecosystem. With 12 million sensors deployed across the golf world, they’re not lacking in real-world validation.

The question becomes whether golfers will embrace a subscription model for rangefinder functionality, even if it delivers unprecedented environmental precision. For many of you, I think that will be a tough ask.

For data-obsessed golfers already in the Arccos ecosystem, the Smart Laser could be the logical next step. For everyone else, the value proposition becomes murkier. Revolutionary technology paired with recurring costs—it’s a combination that could either define the future of golf tech or serve as a cautionary tale about subscription fatigue.

Availability and pricing

  • Introductory Price: $299.99 (includes one-year Smart Laser subscription)
  • Bundle Price: $449.99 (includes Smart Sensors and both subscriptions)
  • Ongoing Subscription: $16.67/month (billed annually at $200)
  • Availability: Limited quantities at launch, shipping late October 2025
  • Initial Access: Arccos members with Game Tracking subscription first, broader availability planned for 2026

The Arccos Smart Laser Rangefinder will initially be available to existing Arccos members, with broader market availability planned for 2026. Whether golfers will pay for precision remains to be seen.

Existing Arccos customers can pre-order the Smart Laser now.

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Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony is the Editor of MyGolfSpy where his job is to bring fresh and innovative content to the site. In addition to his editorial responsibilities, he was instrumental in developing MyGolfSpy's data-driven testing methodologies and continues to sift through our data to find the insights that can help improve your game. Tony believes that golfers deserve to know what's real and what's not, and that means MyGolfSpy's equipment coverage must extend beyond the so-called facts as dictated by the same companies that created them. Most of all Tony believes in performance over hype and #PowerToThePlayer.

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey

Tony Covey





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      Pat G

      6 months ago

      THE FACT THEY MAKE YOU SUBSCRIBE FOR A RANGEFINDER IS ABSOLUTELY RIDICULOUS!!! I JUST HAD MY FIANCÉ PURCHASE IT FOR ME FOR CHRISTMAS AND WILL BE RETURNING NOW…This is absolutely unequivocally insane. I wish I knew this before purchasing. Arccos you are actually scum for this….$8-16$ per month for a fckn laser is legit criminal!! You should be ashamed…DO NOT BUY THIS !

      Reply

      Gary

      9 months ago

      I like my Arccos app, well kind of it has its moments. I looked at this, but for those of us who subscribe to the sensors to charge us an additional subscription fee, and one that high, to use the Range finder is a non-starter for me. I find setting the pin with the Pro device easy, and I’m not always playing to the pin. I often play middle of the green yardage, so I don’t use the range finder. If I could buy the model and use it with my Senors that I pay for annually, then maybe. But another subscription? Miss me on this one.

      Reply

      Josh

      10 months ago

      Bushnell’s *most* expensive Rangefinder is less than 2 years with Arccos, and it won’t suddenly stop working because you cancelled your subscription.

      Any time someone tries to sell you a software subscription for a piece of hardware, do the TCO math and tell them to get bent. Doubly so if the hardware turns into a brick the moment you stop paying…

      Reply

      John

      10 months ago

      Yeah I’m going to hard pass on subscription based bs! Just sell the fricken product for a fair price and stop trying to gouge the golfing community over everything!

      Reply

      mg

      10 months ago

      The yardage finder has not sped up the play by slow players or has it lowered my handicap.
      Another con by the golf industry.

      Reply

      Will

      10 months ago

      It’s an additional subscription? Those imbeciles can’t even keep their app from screwing with the number of putts after I’ve left the green – adding AND removing them at random. But they think I’ll pay them MORE? Laughable.

      Reply

      Mike

      10 months ago

      Arccos is out of their minds, charging $400/year to use their rangefinder & sensors. This coming from a company that years later still hasn’t updated/fixed their Apple Watch app. You record a round & it says you burned zero calories. I emailed about this years ago & they said they will get around to fixing it. THEY STILL HAVEN’T!! Also where is green reading slope maps? Nearly every company has this in their app but Arccos still doesn’t. I’ve been an Arccos user for years & the software is unreliable & overpriced.

      Reply

      CB

      10 months ago

      Even slope adjustments can be a bit dubious due to differing ball flights/trajectory. Temperature, elevation, humidity? Sure, I can be on board with that because they affect air density, which obviously affects ball flight, but those are also things that can much more easily be measured reliably to know how they’ll affect things.

      But wind? Give me a break, and good luck with that. Trees, buildings, terrain have enough of a local impact that you’d be a fool to trust something a rangefinder is going to tell you, not to mention that again ball flight has a massive impact on yardage adjustments for wind. How often have we all watched players and caddies sweating bullets on #12 tee at Augusta, worrying about the swirling winds that are changing by the second? Who thinks a rangefinder based on weather observations in the vicinity (or not even close) to the golf course are actually going to be helpful? For crying out loud, use a weather app to know what the general wind direction is, know which direction you’re hitting, and use some common sense to incorporate what you also feel and adjust for the shot. Any skilled golfer would never rely on something like an automated wind adjustment from a laser, and 90% of those who would rely on it aren’t even skilled enough to hit desired/target yardages such that it would matter.

      Reply

      Tim

      10 months ago

      So the total subscription price for regular Arccos and the rangefinder will be $400. Looks like fun, but that’s really steep.

      Reply

      Andy LaCombe

      10 months ago

      The thing you are missing is that the subscription is EVERY year, so you have to add the subscription for the Rangefinder AND the sensors. Look into it and versus any other rangefinder this is WAY more. Sorry for the caps, but this business model is warped and I am an Arccos user. I was going to get the rangefinder since it made so much sense and would save me the time if setting the pin, but the subscription is nuts

      Reply

      Chux13

      10 months ago

      Gosh dang man. Im so sick of subscription based BS. I get business models keep things moving and allows for “innovation”, but is that steep a sub fee really necessary?! At LEAST offer a lifetime option that does not transfer from the device. Even then, Id be terrified to know what that would run…

      Jef

      10 months ago

      When I got the email on preordering one, I’ll admit I was tempted. But then I read about the subscription and was absolutely shocked.

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