The lower end SDS1104X-E is the king of value for dollar, but there's things it can't do and if you need beyond that, the price step up is pretty across the board (unless you go for a much older generation large footprint scope). I personally don't see a particular reason to stick with just one or two manufacturers, but a lot of the Siglent equipment mentioned does the job just fine. I've got two SPD3303X-Es and a SDG2082X on my bench and they do a fine job, and I've been generally on the side of Siglent's scope UIs more than Rigol's, though either is serviceable.
If you're looking around that budget for a nicer scope, I'd definitely consider R&S's options as well, especially if you don't need very high bandwidths, they've got a few options that may be realistic and offer a bit different featureset. Dave's got a recent video comparing 1GHz scopes and the SDS5000X and some other options, and while they're likely all over your budget, he does go through the datasheet comparison pretty comprehensively, and supposedly there's a full review on the way. If you're willing to consider used there's a whole different set of options, but generally speaking, you'd be sacrificing waveform memory and maybe some ease of use/responsiveness for bandwidth and analysis features, so it's not necessarily that an older used scope will be that beneficial as a general purpose scope.
+1 to proper RF gear if you're dealing with radios much... the dynamic range of a scope just can't compare to a spectrum analyzer, even in eres mode, but that's a whole new investment and consideration. Otherwise, an LCR meter is probably good advice if you don't already have one, especially if you're looking to try to do any work on those RF circuits. The general guidance of Multimeter, Scope, Power supply, Sig gen as a baseline covers a lot of ground and not including soldering equipment.