When looking at a price of an optic also consider what it will cost if the scope doesn't do what you want.
Ammo, trips to the range, lost time, frustration..... From poor tracking, distorted optics, parallax, POI shifts. Some issues aren't obvious to diagnose.
It doesn't take much shooting to eat up the difference between a scope that might work and one that will. Quality of optics. Reliability of tracking. Consistency.
As budget allowed, I have moved up the full range of scopes manf from the 80's till today. There were some real gems that gave great performance for the money invested. Others that ended up being very expensive due to not working as desired.
The further you go, the more important optics and tracking will be to you. Where your balance and value is??? Entirely up to the end user but in general, costs are less important once the demands of LR shooting are attempted and success is met.
When you hit a 5" circle at 1000yds on demand, alot of the investments in better gear pays off big time.
YMMV.
Jerry