I owned and tried dozens of cues before settling on a Southwest. Eighteen years ago I got on the waiting list. It took three years to receive my cue. I have played with it ever since, and I will never let it go. It's probably worth 3-4 times what I paid for it, but it doesn't matter because I will never sell it. I've never played with a finer cue.
That said, if I were to buy a new cue from a custom maker now, I would get one made by Sheldon Lebow. A great many players here in the NW play his cues, and I've tried at least a dozen of them. They were consistently excellent, and I have not heard one--not ONE!--person complain about his cue in any way. Sheldon is a very smart, intuitive guy and an excellent player himself, and he seems to have that intangible sense of what makes a cue play well. There is a wait for his cues, but I think it is more in the 6 month range. His prices, considering how well his cues play and the quality of workmanship, are very reasonable. You should check with him, of course, but I think a simple wrapped cue, without points, is about $600. That is a great value.
Despite the fact that I own a Southwest as well as a Kersenbrock, I intend to have Sheldon make a dustom cue for me. If you consider the Southwest benchmark I measure all cues against, you should get a pretty good idea of what I think of his cues. His cues are that good.