the amp may be incapable of ratings below 0.5% or the lower ratings might be associated with very low power ratings or odd resistances.
a handheld oscope almost certainly won't be able to detect 0.5% clipping. visually, anything less then 1% will be hard to see. I forget excatly what is visible on a real oscope that has more then 6 bit effective resolution. IIRC 1% was around the limit of visibility. that was on a real oscope though.
adding a bandstop network can improve resolution dramatically, and would be invaluable in trying to make detections of less then 1% distortion.
techinically a DMM could work with the bandstop, but i'm not optimistic you'll detect less then 1% distortion still.
i really wouldn't worry about that too much from a practical standpoint. its more important if you are trying to impress people your selling an amp to. other feilds of audio often give ratings at 1% THD and 10% THD. this makes sense because people will tolerate the higher distortion in hopes of more power.