Hi Ron S,
Sharing a bit what I learned with my offset hitch with my 2006 Liberty shown below. It increased the distance between motor home and Liberty by one foot. Initially this sounds like a negative, but in the case with our liberty, it was very good, reason as follows.
When making the sharpest possible turn (a "U" turn on a 4 lane highway with shoulders) the distance between bumpers of Liberty to PC is tight. If I did not have that extra foot from the offset hitch, I wonder if they would make contact creating a jack-knife condition.
If the vehicle you are considering has a dramatically curved front bumper, then I think you will be fine without the extra distance. But a squared-off front bumper might be ripe for trouble.
I imagine an extreme condition is when towing a Wrangler because they have a straight front bumper. Hopefully someone towing a Wrangler will step in and share their experience with tight-turning conditions.
Maybe my concern is unwarranted, but I feel is worth mentioning......just in-case I am right.
Here is my tow setup with our 2006 Jeep Liberty and offset hitch. Note the extra distance the offset hitch adds. I had to get 1 foot longer blue safety cables to work with it.

The first year towing our Liberty, I was uneducated on the effects of an angled tow bar. Our first trip towing this way was without the offset hitch, so our Liberty was one foot closer to our PC. Either I never made a tight "U" turn, or I did and there was no contact made. I really don't know the actual condition I had back then. One thing certain, there is no damage to our PC.
Here is what I had which is a bad condition in-general. This created lots of "bucking".

For reference concerning a curved front bumper, here was our first tow vehicle. This standard hitch setup was fine with no jack-knife condition.....I remember checking for it back then.

Just be mindful when setting up whatever you buy for towing. Worst case, you would have to add a hitch extension and get longer safety cables.