Key takeaways
- Bluetooth trackers (AirTag, Tracker Mist, Tile) are cheap, last a year on a coin cell, and find things — keys, wallets, bags — with no fees.
- GPS trackers have their own location hardware and a cellular plan, give real-time tracking, but cost more and need a monthly subscription.
- For everyday misplaced items, Bluetooth wins. For live-tracking a car, fleet, or a roaming pet across open country, GPS wins.
- Tracker Mist is a Bluetooth + Apple Find My tracker — no GPS hardware, no subscription.
The short answer
A Bluetooth tracker helps you find things you misplace — it's small, cheap, lasts about a year, and has no fees, but it relies on phones nearby to report a far-away location. A GPS tracker pinpoints its own location in real time anywhere with cell coverage, but it's bigger, pricier, and needs a monthly data plan. Most people losing keys and wallets want Bluetooth.
How Bluetooth trackers work
A Bluetooth tracker is a tiny beacon. Your phone hears it directly when it's close (about 30–50 feet). When it's far, it leans on a crowdsourced network — Apple's Find My or Google's Find Hub — so other people's phones relay its last-seen location back to you anonymously.
Because there's no GPS chip or cellular radio, a coin-cell battery lasts a year or more and there's nothing to subscribe to. The trade-off: you get a precise location up close and a "last seen here" location far away — not a moving dot every second.
How GPS trackers work
A GPS tracker calculates its own position from satellites, then sends it over a cellular connection to an app — which is why these devices almost always require a SIM and a monthly plan. That gives you genuine real-time tracking, location history, geofencing, and speed alerts.
The cost is size, price, and upkeep: GPS trackers are bigger, can run $30–$150+ up front plus $5–$30 a month, and their batteries are measured in days or weeks, not months.
Side-by-side comparison
| Bluetooth tracker | GPS tracker | |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | Low (~$20) | Higher ($30–$150+) |
| Subscription | None | Usually required ($5–$30/mo) |
| Battery life | 12+ months (coin cell) | Days to weeks (rechargeable) |
| Real-time tracking | Near you only | Yes, anywhere with signal |
| Far-away location | Last seen, via nearby phones | Live, via cellular |
| Size | Coin-sized | Larger device |
| Best for | Keys, wallets, bags, luggage | Vehicles, fleets, roaming pets |
Which should you choose?
Match the tool to the problem:
- Choose Bluetooth if you keep misplacing everyday items, want a year of battery, and don't want a monthly bill.
- Choose GPS if you need to watch something move in real time — a car, a delivery fleet, or a pet that roams across open, low-traffic areas.
Bluetooth trackers can help recover a pet in a busy neighborhood where phones are around. But for an escape-prone pet in rural areas, a dedicated GPS collar is the safer choice — be honest with yourself about the environment.
Where Tracker Mist fits
Tracker Mist is firmly in the Bluetooth camp: it pairs with Apple Find My, uses the billion-device network for far-away pings, and runs on a replaceable coin cell with no subscription. It's built for the everyday "where did I leave it?" problem — not live GPS surveillance.
If you're tracking things you tend to misplace, a Bluetooth tracker like Tracker Mist is cheaper, lasts far longer, and skips the monthly fee. Save GPS for when you genuinely need a live, moving location.
