What do you need to use it for? Is it once every few years or random troubleshooting for continuity, is voltage present and roughly what you'd expect, etc? OR are you looking for actual indications and more deeply troubleshooting?
Accuracy. That's what should drive your requirement. If you don't need it then the HF or Kleins, etc will get you down the road at a significant cost savings.
Fluke 87V is 10 times more accurate for DC voltage than the harbor freight model. If I'm troubleshooting a 12v automotive system occasionally to see the difference between 3V and 12V or if it is even present then I don't need the Fluke, but if I'm troubleshooting the system components to see the difference between 11.8V and 12.5V then I absolutely need the accuracy of the Fluke.
Calibration/Metrology and test equipment... anything that measures anything has been my world for 35 years.
Attached are the spec sheets for the 87V and the Doyle.
Fluke has many different models of handheld meters and effectively owns that space for quality meters. If the 87V is overkill, you do not need True-RMS, etc. then I'd look at different models tailored to what you need... but I wouldn't look anywhere but Fluke for handheld multi-meters.