I am Dutch but I live in Thailand. The $600 isn't even the highest price I've seen resellers here charge for the Instek.
While 'discount level' scopes (the ~$200 type) can be ordered from places like AliExpress and as such stand a decent chance of arriving without import duties added on top, 'entry level' scopes ($350-400 from respectable brands) are only imported but official distributors and import duties are always passed on to the consumer. This is why these things are so expensive here.
Electronics is a new hobby for me. I'm maybe two years in, have in recent months faced several situations where (according to a friend) a scope would have been useful to diagnose a problem and have decided I should be getting one. Because it's just a hobby, and because I really don't know what features are important to me, I don't really want to spend more then about $200 on one. For that budget, I can get a new discount level or a used entry level scope.
So how do I decide what to get? Well, my thinking is that accuracy is more important than bells and whistles. See, I don't know the first thing about scopes and I'll have plenty to learn even with a fairly basic scope. But when I see people posting videos of the Fnirsi 1014d not being able to read a 100MHz signal even if thats what it advertises, or a video of the Hantek DSO2C10 measuring low voltages incorrectly, this to me feels like a big red flag. Not because I need a 100MHz scope or expect many 100mV signals, but because I know this is an issue with these scopes I'll always be wondering if an odd reading is because of a lack of knowledge or because of a device not living up to its promise. I think when that starts happening, I'll stop using the scope and stop learning as a result. Not a desired outcome.
The Owon SDS1102 seems to be getting solid reviews and accurate results. So unless someone tells me otherwise, it's an option for me. The alternative would be something like the GW Instek, a second-hand, entry-level scope that still works well. Both available at a $200-250 price tag. The Owon would be on my bench within weeks. A second-hand would probably take months to source, because there is just not a lot of supply in the second-hand market. If "second-hand entry level" is the way to go, I'll muster the patience to wait for that. It won't be easy!
The way I look at this is that after I've mastered the features of this first purchase, I'll have a much better idea of what I want going forward. I'll know how many channels I should be getting because I kept running into the limit of having two, or not. I'll know if I need 100MHz, or if 50MHz or even 20MHz would have been fine. I'll know if a 10M memory depth per channel is awesome, or if I rarely ever use it. I'll know if a 5mV/div sucks, or is just fine for my predominently 3.3V domain. I'll know if 8 bits has regularly been annoying, or if its just fine. And once I know all those things, I can then splurge on a something of a higher quality with the features I need. Probably ditching my Salae-clone logic analyzer in the process, and integrating both into a mixed-domain device.
But hey, what do I know!? The above is what seems sensible to me. But I'm very open to being wrong. Would be very happy to get feedback!
Sorry, perhaps most of the above should be a separate thread?