I would memorize plate voltage or write it on the amp. Tubes are changed regularly and need re-biasing to reach target current, but plate voltage
and target current don't change with "normal" operation and maintenance. At least not in a way worth worrying about-- wall outlet voltage can affect it +/- a few percent but this changes between venues or between your home and a venue, and most people don't re-bias every time the amp is moved.
Voltage sags with changing current, but you're usually biasing new tubes to draw the same current as the old, so once you hit that target, you can assume voltage is the same as before.
If you plan to swap very different tubes (like 6L6 and 6V6) you want to check B+ because it will change lots with a halving/doubling of current.
I found this 1%, 1M, 3 watt resistor rated for 750v:
https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Vishay-BC-Components/PR03000201004FAC00?qs=sGAEpiMZZMtlubZbdhIBIEEdsE%252bzDFm9xwpKNsJJfwI%3dMouser sells lots of cheap 3W resistors rated for 600v or higher, this only gets tricky/expensive when you look for 1% tolerance. But it's still only $0.95.
PRR's circuit is good enough. If you want to go farther: Voltage divider formula is R1/(R1 + R2); 1,000,000 / 1,001,000 = .9990 Not .1!!!
So for ultimate precision you need a "9" value R in there. The math is giving me a headache; and I have some pressing work to do.
If you wanted to correct this error the bottom (1k) resistor being larger is easiest. How much larger? If you had 1001ohm instead of 1000, you get .999999. 1002 ohm overshoots to 1.000997. That really shows how small the error is, and impractical to fix. You could also reduce the 1M to 999000ohm, but combining that specific value with the high voltage/power rating makes it even harder to get.
Now, this
would matter if you were dividing the voltage by 10, you'd get 1/11 or 91% of the reading you're looking for. But when the divider ratio shrinks, so does that sort of error, in this case below component variation even if we buy
very good resistors, and way below what we care about.