Since you're in the NorthWest US, I suggest a Silva Ranger 15 TDCL. My local declination is currently about zero, but I haven't messed with declination conversions in various parts of the world for decades - adjustable compasses keep me on track (sorry for the pun). There are better compasses, but IMO the Ranger 15 TDCL is a very good value - I'm on my 3rd one and now that I'm retired from the Army I don't expect I'll destroy this one. I like these very much. I keep a basic orienteering compass in my gear as well because that's what I use to teach Scouts and newbies with - the Ranger 15 is not a good teaching compass.
Silva Site Navigate products to outdoors to Ranger.
This is reaching back a ways, but... I've used a Ranger 15 in a ~30 degree declination area to lay in 81mm mortars well enough to get 2nd or third round "Fire for Effect" at near max range, so they are usefully accurate. Not as accurate as a Brunton pocket transit (US M2 compass), but much less expensive and immensely more useful in the normal "real world" of land navigation than the more sophisticated compasses like the Brunton.
I have found these accurate enough that it is worth setting them up on a local surveyed declination station if you can locate one in your area. Check with your local ARNG - maneuver units and artillery units in particular *should* have surveyed declination stations at their armories. Occasionally I have found stations in National Forests but all I have found were knocked loose by someone and/or not seasonally maintained - YMMV.
While I'm on that topic - if you DON'T have an adjustable compass, you really ought to check it on a current declination station - it is amazing how much error there is in mass-produced compasses, even fairly expensive ones. Put it on and off the station at least three times and average the observed error, then scribe it somewhere on the baseplate. The best compass check stations have three or four azimuths on them, as some compasses have different errors in different quadrants. My guess is that GPS vulgarity is going to shove this sort of finer points of land navigation & map reading into obscurity; not sure what I think about that...
Probably 99% of the time decent compasses are close enough for most of us, but sometimes one simply must be right on the money and an unchecked compass can really ruin your day (or worse, night).
If you don't have a local declination station you can check compasses like the Ranger against the North star but it's not as accurate - the sighting system is not as precise as something like an M2. OTOH, that's a way to reasonably dial in real local declination fairly close. You need something to lay the compass on when you do this, as hand-holding it for that is too fraught with wobbles for me at least.