I just cant see myself spending 500 + on a scale

Its not like I will be doing national competitions but mainly local club stuff.
Spend $500+ on a gorgeous scale if you like it, want it, and can afford it.
But, don't think you _need_ to spend big dollars on a scale.
You should have a good competent scale. Any of the traditional beam balances are fine, and perfectly up to the task.
I shoot national competitions, and I do not weigh each charge in my ammo that I use at 300, 500 and 600 yards (I have satisfied myself that ammo made with thrown powder charges is way-more-than-accurate-enough). In fact, under certain circumstances I will use ammo made with thrown charges at the longest (and most difficult) distances we compete at (800m/900m or 900y/1000y).
If you want to weigh a number of charges to the same weight, a beam balance does a very good and efficient job of this. You set the scale to the desired charge weight, you have your powder measure set up to throw about half a grain light, and then you trickle-up (by fingers, or with a powder trickler) the charge in the pan until the beam comes into balance.
*Many* electronic scales out there cannot be trusted to operate accurately when trickling powder (their software can see the slow change in measured weight, and wrongly interpret it as thermal or sensor drift, and automagically null out these changes, thinking it is helping you...). I treat digital scales as guilty until proven innocent of this fault.
On the other hand, electronic scales are *way* faster and more efficient when it comes to weighing a large number of objects that have a different weight, for example weighing out 500 pieces of brass for sorting. This is practical with an electronic scale, and nearly impossibly difficult with a beam balance.