I didn't mean to imply it did, only that it's more convenient and worth $10 more. The safety comment was in regards to Uni-T products, which seems to have a lot of variability in build quality, input protection, and overall safety features integrated into the design.
Uni-T products "work" well, no doubt. I even have one that I use for low voltage stuff. I think it's important to remember that when you buy a fluke, agilent, keysight, gossen, brymen rebrands, UEI, etc., you're buying a meter that's been thoughtfully designed with function and safety, not function at the lowest cost possible as I would argue many Uni-T and other amazon grade products tend to be. Uni-T stuff is perfect for automotive use but I would not buy Uni-T equipment without watching a detailed teardown video like from eevblog or similar to understand what I'm getting. They are notoriously skimpy on input protection, skipping key resistors and diodes, skimping on MOV and PTCs, lack of spark gaps, and using fuses that are only rated to 240v despite 600v CATIII or better ratings.
The problem with budget meters for home users is that home users (myself included) are the ones most likely to lack the knowledge and experience so they're more likely to need the protection offered by higher meters. To each his own, but I'm fine paying a premium for safety.