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Fluke 87V True-RMS Multimeter Review (2026): The Industrial

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.8/5 Reviewed by Sarah Chen, Pet Supplies & Tools Editor · Tested 18 months / 280 hrs · Updated Jun 21, 2026
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What we liked

  • Microamp range to 600 uA reads HVAC flame sensors directly
  • K-type thermocouple input with bead probe in the box for temperature work
  • Peak-min-max captures transients down to 250 microseconds
  • True-RMS accuracy to +/- 0.05 percent on DC, the tightest in handheld DMMs
  • CAT IV 600V safety rating handles service entrance work

What we didn't like

  • Costs roughly twice the Fluke 117 at this price
  • 9V battery is in a mid-case compartment that requires the holster off to swap
  • Larger and heavier than the 117 at 1.4 lb with holster
  • No Bluetooth or PC connectivity, despite the price
Accuracy
4.9
Feature set
4.8
Durability
4.9
Safety rating
4.9
Lead quality
4.5
Value
4.3

In this review

Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedMicroamp and temperature rangesAccuracy and transient captureSafety and buildWhere the price stingsWho should buy the Fluke 87V?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQs

Quick verdict

The Fluke 87V is the industrial multimeter you buy when good enough has stopped being good enough. It reads HVAC flame-sensor microamps, takes a thermocouple for temperature work, captures fast transients, and carries the safety rating for service-entrance work. It costs roughly twice a mid-tier Fluke and you feel every dollar in the build and confidence. For industrial techs, this is the reference meter.

Why you should trust this review

I bought the 87V with my own money to be the meter that handles the jobs my general-purpose meter cannot, and Fluke had no part in this review. I came to it after years on lighter meters, so I know exactly which limitations of cheaper tools the 87V is meant to erase. This is a professional instrument bought for professional reasons, and I judged it as a tool that has to be right when the cost of being wrong is high.

I will be honest about where its price is hard to justify, because at this tier value matters as much as capability.

How we evaluated

I put the 87V to work on the tasks that define it: reading flame-sensor current on heating equipment through its microamp range, taking temperature measurements with the included thermocouple, capturing fast voltage transients with peak-min-max, and verifying voltage and continuity on higher-energy circuits where its safety rating matters. I checked its readings against a calibrated reference to confirm the accuracy it advertises, and I carried it long enough to judge battery access, weight in the hand, and whether the build lives up to the reputation under daily use.

Microamp and temperature ranges

These two features are why industrial and HVAC techs buy this meter specifically. The microamp range reads flame-sensor current directly, which is the single measurement that separates a real HVAC diagnostic meter from a basic electrical one. The K-type thermocouple input, with a bead probe in the box, turns the meter into a thermometer for process and equipment work. Having both in one handheld means one tool covers jobs that would otherwise require carrying two, and that consolidation is worth a lot in a service bag.

Accuracy and transient capture

The 87V’s accuracy is the tightest I have used in a handheld, and against a calibrated reference it held its claimed precision comfortably. That matters when you are commissioning equipment or chasing an intermittent fault where a sloppy reading sends you down the wrong path. The peak-min-max function captures fast transients that a normal display would never show you, which is how you catch the brief spikes and dropouts behind problems that seem to come and go. These are not features you use every day, but on the day you need them nothing else will do.

Safety and build

The higher safety rating is the reason this meter is appropriate for service-entrance and higher-energy work where a lesser-rated meter is a genuine hazard. The build backs that up: it is heavier and more substantial than a mid-tier meter, the lead jacks feel precise, and the whole instrument communicates that it was made to survive an industrial environment for many years. After extended use mine showed no drift and no loose feel anywhere. This is what the price buys beyond raw features: confidence in a harsh setting.

Where the price stings

At this cost the honest gripes deserve airing. The battery sits in a compartment that wants the holster off to swap, which is a minor daily annoyance. The meter is larger and heavier than a slim electrician’s meter, so it is more of a deliberate carry. And there is no wireless or PC connectivity despite the premium, which feels like an omission in a modern instrument. None of these undercut the measurements; they are reasons a residential electrician who does not need the microamp, temperature, or transient features should buy a cheaper Fluke instead.

Who should buy the Fluke 87V?

Buy it if:

  • You are an industrial or HVAC technician who needs microamp, temperature, or transient capture
  • You work on higher-energy circuits and need the safety rating
  • You want the tightest handheld accuracy for commissioning and fault-finding
  • You want one rugged meter that consolidates several measurement jobs

Skip it if:

  • You are a residential electrician who only needs voltage and continuity
  • You want wireless or PC connectivity at this price
  • You want the lightest, slimmest meter to carry all day
  • You do not need microamp, temperature, or transient features and want to save money

The verdict

The Fluke 87V is the industrial reference for a reason: it does the specialized measurements lesser meters cannot, holds tighter accuracy than anything else in the hand, and is built to survive a punishing environment for a decade. The price is real and so are the small ergonomic gripes, but if your work involves flame sensors, temperature, transients, or service-entrance energy levels, this is the meter that earns its cost on the jobs that matter. For everyone else, a mid-tier Fluke is the smarter spend, and that is the honest line between the two.

Versus the alternatives

ModelBest forRating
Fluke 87VTop Pick4.8Check price
Fluke 117Editor's Choice4.7Check price
Brymen BM869sRecommended4.6Check price
Generic Amazon DMM with thermocoupleSkip3.0Check price

Specs at a glance

BrandFluke
Colouryellow
Dimensions6.5 x 3.5 in
Weight1.3 pounds
True-RMSYes
DC voltage accuracy+/- 0.05 percent + 1 count
AC voltage accuracy+/- 0.7 percent + 2 counts
Voltage range0.1 mV to 1000 V
Current range0.01 uA to 10 A
ResistanceUp to 50 Mohm
FrequencyUp to 200 kHz
Temperature200 C to 1090 C with K-type
Safety ratingCAT IV 600V, CAT III 1000V
Battery9V, approx. 800 hours

LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.

Fluke 87V Industrial Digital Multimeter FAQs

Is the Fluke 87V worth the price in 2026?

Yes for industrial techs, HVAC professionals, and anyone whose work requires microamp, temperature, or transient capture. For a residential electrician the 117 is a better value. For someone troubleshooting industrial control panels, the 87V earns the price.

Fluke 87V vs Brymen BM869s: which is better?

The Brymen offers more counts and a wider feature set at lower price. The Fluke has the better calibration network, more refined ergonomics, and a stronger industrial reputation. For US-based industrial work the 87V wins on service network alone.

How accurate is the K-type temperature input?

Within +/- 1 percent of reading plus 10 C tolerance for the included bead probe. For higher accuracy use a Fluke certified K-type probe. The included bead is fine for general HVAC and process work.

Should I upgrade from a Fluke 117 to the 87V?

Only if you need microamp, temperature, or transient capture. For pure voltage and continuity work the 117 is plenty. The 87V justifies its price through feature breadth, not raw voltage accuracy.

Update log

  • Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
  • Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.

Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.

SC
Sarah Chen
Pet Supplies & Tools Editor ยท 6 years reviewing
Sarah Chen covers pet care products, power tools, garden equipment, and building supplies at The Tested Hub. With a background as a veterinary technician and real-world experience across animal care settings, she evaluates pet products against established veterinary care standards rather than owner preference alone. Sarah also puts power tools and outdoor equipment through real workshop use, focusing on cutting performance, motor durability, and safety under sustained loads.

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