New for 2026 at GolfBays: The Latest Launch Monitors Worth Your Attention

April 14, 2026

By Malek Murison

New for 2026 at GolfBays: The Latest Launch Monitors Worth Your Attention

If you’ve taken a peek into the world of golf simulators lately, you’ll know the experience can unravel fairly quickly. One minute you’re comparing Garmin with SkyTrak. The next, you’re thirteen tabs deep exploring spin axis, launch angle, software subscriptions and whether your garage can double as a performance studio.

But big news! 2026 has so far delivered a couple of launch monitors that suggest the market is getting better at separating simple practice tools from more advanced simulator systems, which is great for anyone who wants useful feedback without needing a degree in ball flight.

In this guide, we are looking at the newest launch monitors launched in 2026 and now available at GolfBays, breaking down what each one does well, where it fits, and who it’s really for.

A New Entry-Level Launch Monitor: The Shot Scope LM1

The Shot Scope LM1 is a great addition to our range of entry-level launch monitors this year. It’s a compact Doppler radar unit built around five core metrics: clubhead speed, ball speed, smash factor, carry distance and total distance. That data appears on a 3.5-inch colour display, with simple button navigation, Bluetooth syncing, speed training mode, and no subscription required to review session history in the Shot Scope app. 

It’s designed for indoor and outdoor use thanks to its IPX3 rating, and runs for around five hours on a full charge.

What makes the LM1 especially appealing is that it does not try to dress itself up as something it isn’t. For a great price, it gives you feedback that actually helps you practise with intent: how fast you are swinging, how efficiently you are striking it, and whether your carry numbers are where you think they are. With the built-in screen, you can see your data there and then, without constantly reaching for a phone or tablet between shots, which makes practice feel more like practice (and less like admin.)

From a setup point of view, the Shot Scope is pretty low-fuss. Position it 1.4 metres behind the ball and swing away. The whole package is built around portability and ease of use, which suits players who want a bit of flexibility between range sessions, garden nets, and more. 

This is not the launch monitor you buy for deep spin analysis, club delivery detail or simulation-heavy use. It’s a streamlined practice tool, with straightforward speed and distance feedback, quick setup, and enough consistency to make club comparisons, distance checks and structured practice sessions genuinely useful. 

A New Middle Ground Contender: The Square Golf Omni

The Square Golf Omni is one of the more interesting 2026 releases because it takes camera-based ball tracking into a price bracket that usually comes with more compromise.

Square positions it as an indoor and outdoor launch monitor, and the core spec explains why it stands out: four-camera infrared tracking, a built-in display with key ball and club metrics, a larger hitting area, and no need for marked balls. 

This new launch monitor is clearly aimed at golfers who want more than entry-level feedback without leaping straight into premium launch monitor pricing.

The Omni is trying to solve a very practical problem. A lot of golfers want one monitor that can handle a home sim setup during the week and range sessions or outdoor practice when the weather behaves itself. Square has built the Omni with that in mind. It is designed to be set up on a flat surface opposite the ball, used indoors or outdoors, and connected via Bluetooth to Square’s software when you want a fuller simulator or practice experience.

The data offering is also a step up from the simpler end of the market. You can expect a full spread of ball data including ball speed, direction, launch angle, backspin, sidespin, spin rate, spin axis, apex, carry, run, total distance, landing angle and offline distance. On the club data side, it includes club path, face to target, attack angle, dynamic loft, impact horizontal, impact vertical, club speed and smash factor. In other words,  enough detail to make the Omni genuinely useful for more serious practice, distance work and ball-flight analysis.

That extra club data is a big part of the Omni’s appeal. It gives you a clear picture of what happened through impact, which matters when you are trying to understand strike quality, face delivery or why one shot differs wildly from another. 

The software side is well judged too. Out of the box, Square includes no subscription fee, 1,000 free golf course credits, and access to its own software across Driving Range, Closest to the Pin, Putting and Golf Course modes. It also supports third-party platforms including GSPro, E6 Connect and Awesome Golf. 

The Omni’s strength is that it lands in a very usable middle ground. It gives you the indoor-friendly nature of photometric tracking, the flexibility to go outdoors, and enough club and ball data to make a proper simulator build or structured practice setup feel worthwhile. It is not trying to be the cheapest option in the room, and it is not pretending to be a tour-level fitting system either. 

Think of it as a practical launch monitor for golfers who want more insight and more flexibility.

Looking Ahead

2026 has not reinvented the launch monitor (yet!). What it has done is make the category easier to navigate.

At one end, entry-level devices like the Shot Scope LM1 show that simple practice data can now be genuinely useful, rather than feeling like a watered-down version of something better. At the other, launches like the Square Golf Omni show how much more flexible and capable mid-range systems are becoming, especially for golfers building indoor setups.

For most golfers, that matters more than a longer feature list.

So, What’s On The Golf Simulator Horizon?

The launch calendar for new golf simulators looks pretty quiet up ahead.

The Shot Scope LM1 and the Square Golf Omni are both rolling out this spring, and beyond that, the IDRA Pro is expected sometime later this year.

If recent releases are anything to go by, indoor and outdoor flexibility, quicker setup, built-in displays, and stronger software integration are the order of the day. In other words, the market is getting better at producing launch monitors that fit the way golfers really practise and play.

We'll keep this post updated with any more 2026 releases! 

Als je dit artikel leuk vond, houd het dan niet voor jezelf! Deel het met je vrienden:

SHOP OUR BEST-SELLERS