For easy hobbiest stuff i would just recommend a Ersa I-Con-Nano or Pico or one of these new Weller ones (did forget the name, but i think the pricetag is similar to the I-Con-Nano).
Do note that the Pico isn't ESD compliant, while the Nano and Weller WE1010 are.
Pico had also lower power rating and firmware differences (Nano has programmable presets etc.). Nano I can only recommend - I have it for a few years now and it is a very good iron. Heats up very fast, good thermal capacity (I was soldering shielding cans out of sheet metal with it with no issues), lightweight handpiece (more a pencil than a classic iron), good choice of reasonably priced tips and the station is tiny so takes up very little space on the bench.
The only quibbles are the quite stiff cable to the handpiece (Hey, ERSA even my ancient el-cheapo Solomon has a silicone insulated cable!) and that tip changing can be a bit of chore when hot - do make sure to buy some extra nuts for the tips because you
will not be able to push a hot tip out of the nut to swap it for something else! It is plenty difficult to do even when cold. Also it is not possible to replace the handpiece with anything else (e.g. hot tweezers) - the cable is not on a regular connector and ERSA doesn't even sell other handpiece types for it. For that one needs to pay a bit more for one of the higher models.
Basically the Nano is for Europeans what the Hakko FX888 is for the Americans (Hakko has insane prices and availability issues in Europe).