Depends what it's for, but for mains testing, personally I'd pick up an old AVO 8 from ebay or similar.
They usually clean up well, and the electronics can be repaired, and they may even be recalibrated (expensively, but AVO are based in Dover, UK, IIRC) but it is _essential_ that they are shipped to you with the selector switches in the off positions: this puts a dead short across the meter coil, which damps the movement and makes it reasonably shockproof. They still need to be packed very well as they don't survive being dropped.
Mine came from ebay, and it's very useful. You do have to remember how it works though, as there's a bit of understanding required. For example the meter coil impedance is usually 2k Ohms, IIRC, not the very high impedance of digital meters. This is good and bad: a digital meter can give false (or at least wildly inaccurate) voltage readings, because it draws almost no current in use. So measuring earth potentials or earth-to-neutral can give you weird values that may not matter at all in practice. They are similarly poor at measuring low resistances. For both these tasks a traditional moving-coil meter (used properly, and that's important!) will give more reliable results, as there will be actual current passing through it.
So if the reason for an odd earth-neutral voltage value is capacitance-induced, your digital meter will possibly lie to you, whereas a multimeter will settle down to a meaningful value.
I'm a bit out-of-date on this, and I'd expect modern Fluke digital meters (for electricians, note!), will probably be spot-on for the purpose, as would the other quality brands. But I can't afford one!
E.
PS: Safety warning: Used incorrectly, all test meters can be dangerous, as you are probably connecting them to live circuits. AVOs have some protection built-in, but it's for the meter, not the human using it.
"If in doubt, don't!" is a good rule of thumb for any electrical testing, and applies particularly to the correct selection of meter ranges. AVOs are excellent but they are also complex and you need to be confident in their use.