BUILD GUIDE

GSPro: The Sim Software Enthusiasts Actually Use

If you spend any time in home sim forums or Discord servers, you will hear about GSPro within about five minutes. It is the software a huge chunk of serious sim golfers settle on once they outgrow the app that came with their launch monitor. The short version: realistic physics, a free community course library that runs into the thousands of designs, online leagues and tours, and a price of roughly $250 a year. It is not the prettiest menu system you will ever click through, and it only runs on Windows, but on the course it feels right, and that is what keeps people on it.

The catch is that GSPro is software only. It does not see your ball. It needs a compatible launch monitor feeding it data through a connector called OGT, plus a Windows PC to run on. Get those two things right and the rest is easy. This guide walks through what GSPro is, which monitors connect, what kind of PC you need, and how it stacks up against E6 Connect and the native apps your monitor ships with.

What GSPro is and why people love it

GSPro is golf simulator software built by sim golfers, for sim golfers. It takes the shot data from your launch monitor (ball speed, launch angle, spin, club path and so on) and turns it into a ball flight on a virtual course. Where it earns its reputation is in three places.

The physics feel honest. Mishits get punished, good strikes get rewarded, and the ball behaves the way you expect when it lands. People who have played several sim platforms tend to say GSPro tracks closest to a real round, especially around the greens and in the wind.

The course library is the real hook. GSPro has an enormous, free, community-built course library. Members design and upload courses, from famous tournament venues to your local muni, and you download what you want at no extra cost. That alone is why a lot of golfers jump ship from a native app, where you often pay per course or get a short list.

It is social. There are online tours, weekly leagues, and a ranking system, so you can play against other people from your garage. For a one-person operator at home, that turns a quiet practice session into something with a bit of competition behind it.

Pricing sits around $250 per year for the standard membership. That is a real annual cost, so factor it in alongside your hardware. If you want the bigger picture on what a full bay runs, see our golf simulator cost breakdown.

Which Launch monitors Connect to GSPro

This is the question that trips most people up, so let me be plain about it. GSPro connects to monitors through a piece of software called the OGT connector. Your monitor has to be on the supported list and, in most cases, you run a small connector program that bridges the monitor to GSPro. Here are the popular units that work in 2026 and what to expect from each.

Launch monitorTypeRough priceNotes for GSPro
SkyTrak+Photometric plus radar~$3,000One of the most popular GSPro pairings, fits tight rooms, sim play needs a subscription on top of GSPro
Bushnell Launch ProPhotometric~$2,000 to $3,500Best raw accuracy, sits beside the ball so it works in small spaces, a license tier unlocks data
FlightScope Mevo+Doppler radar~$2,000Great connection, but as a radar it wants ball flight distance, so you need room
Garmin Approach R10Doppler radar~$600Best budget path into GSPro, needs roughly 8 ft of ball flight to read well
Uneekor (EYE XO and others)Overhead photometric~$9,000 and upPremium ceiling-mounted option, full club and ball data, uses marked balls

That is the core list, and GSPro keeps adding hardware over time, so other units connect too. The honest takeaway: a Garmin R10 is the cheapest legitimate way to run GSPro at home if you have the depth for ball flight, while a SkyTrak+ or Bushnell Launch Pro is the sweet spot for accuracy plus a small footprint. If you are still picking hardware, start with our best golf launch monitors roundup, and for a deeper look at the most common GSPro pairing read the SkyTrak+ review.

What PC you need to run it

GSPro is Windows only. There is no Mac version and no console version, so plan on a Windows PC or laptop. The good news is you do not need a monster machine, you need a competent gaming PC.

A practical tip from building these: do not cheap out on the GPU to save money on the monitor, and do not cheap out on the monitor to splurge on the PC. Both need to be decent. If a course stutters or the ball flight looks choppy, the GPU is almost always the bottleneck, not your launch monitor.

Setup overview, start to first shot

Getting GSPro running is not hard, but the order matters. Here is the path I follow on a new build.

One real-world note on space. If you run a radar monitor like the Mevo+ or R10, you need ball-flight distance for it to read cleanly, roughly 8 to 16 ft from ball to screen. Photometric units like SkyTrak+ and Bushnell Launch Pro sit beside the ball and fit tighter rooms. Either way you want at least a 9 ft ceiling, ideally 10 ft, and clearance for both a righty and a lefty swing. None of that is a GSPro setting, it is a room reality, so measure before you buy.

GSPro vs E6 Connect vs native apps

GSPro is not the only software in town, and it is not automatically the right pick for everyone. Here is how I think about the three options most home builders weigh.

GSPro wins on physics realism, the free community course library, and the social tours and leagues. The trade-offs are that it is Windows only, the interface is more functional than slick, and you are paying around $250 a year on top of any monitor subscription. For an enthusiast who plays a lot and wants endless free courses, it is the easy favorite.

E6 Connect is the more polished, commercial-feeling option. The graphics and presentation are clean, it has driving range and skills modes, and many people find the menus friendlier. The catch is course content is more of a paid model, so the long library you get free in GSPro can cost extra here. E6 runs on more platforms too, which matters if Windows is a hassle for you.

Native apps are the software that ships with your monitor, like SkyTrak's own app or the Garmin Golf app for the R10. They are the simplest place to start, they cost nothing extra beyond your monitor's own subscription, and for casual practice and quick range sessions they are genuinely enough. Where they fall short is course variety and the community side, which is exactly the gap GSPro fills.

My honest take: start on your monitor's native app, make sure you actually use the sim, then add GSPro once you know you want more courses and competition. There is no rush, and you can run more than one. For a side-by-side on all the platforms, see our best golf simulator software guide.

Is GSPro worth it for you

Here is the part nobody selling you software wants to say. GSPro is a nice-to-have, not a must. If your goal is to groove a swing and get reps over the winter, a net, a mat, and your phone are plenty, and a basic launch monitor on its native app covers most practice. You do not need a full simulator to get better at golf.

Where GSPro earns its keep is when you want to play golf indoors, not just practice it. If you will genuinely play rounds, join a tour, and download new courses to keep it fresh, the roughly $250 a year is easy to justify against the cost of green fees. If you are honest with yourself and you mostly want to hit balls, save the money and the PC headache, and revisit it later.

If you are ready to build the bay, get the room and the launch monitor right first, since the software is the easy part. A budget radar unit plus GSPro is a legitimate way in, and a photometric monitor is the move for tight rooms and top accuracy. Whatever you pick, GSPro will be waiting, and it connects to all of it.

Where to buy

Comparing builds? Shop Indoor Golf and Rain or Shine Golf carry the launch monitors, enclosures and packages we recommend.

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Affiliate link. We may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. It never changes our rankings (see how we test). A net plus your phone is enough practice for many golfers.

Frequently asked questions

Does GSPro work on a Mac?

No. GSPro is Windows only, and there is no Mac or console version. You need a Windows 10 or 11 PC with a dedicated graphics card to run it well. Some people run Windows on Mac hardware through workarounds, but it is not officially supported and not worth the hassle. Plan on a proper Windows gaming PC for a smooth experience.

How much does GSPro cost per year?

GSPro membership runs about $250 per year for the standard tier. That is on top of your launch monitor and, in many cases, a separate subscription your monitor needs to feed sim data, such as on SkyTrak+. The big upside is the course library is free, so unlike some platforms you are not paying per course once you are a member.

Which cheap launch monitor connects to GSPro?

The Garmin Approach R10, at roughly $600, is the most affordable monitor that connects to GSPro through the OGT connector. It is doppler radar, so it needs about 8 ft of ball flight to read accurately, meaning you need some room depth. If your space is tight, a photometric unit that sits beside the ball is a better fit, but it will cost more.

What is the OGT connector?

The OGT connector is the connector software that bridges your launch monitor to GSPro. Each supported monitor has its own connector that you install on the same Windows PC. It reads the shot data from your monitor and passes it to GSPro so the game can build the ball flight. Setup is usually a quick install once your monitor already reads shots.

Is GSPro better than the app my monitor came with?

For courses and competition, yes, which is why so many people switch. Native apps are simpler and cost nothing extra, and they are genuinely fine for practice and range work. GSPro adds realistic physics, a huge free course library, and online tours. Start on your native app, confirm you use the sim, then add GSPro when you want more variety and online play.

Tyler Brooks
Tyler Brooks
Indoor-golf builder · 4-handicap

I build and test home golf simulators for a living, and I write every review and guide here. I tell you where to save and where it pays to spend. How we test →