Also, Reloading and "saving" money is an oxymoron. You don't "save" money, all you do is to have a new and different hobby that will redirect any savings into your components to allow you shoot (more?).
This is a misrepresentation. You will save money.
The issue is, what will you do with the savings ?You may know a "shopper" who saves $200 on the purchase of a couch. Then, they go out and buy the matching love seat, recliner and 60" wall-mount TV to celebrate ! True, their checkbook is busted. But, they did save $200 on the couch, which was the intended purchase.
What happens is that in place of the 30 rounds a person may normally go shoot, the reloader often finds themselves with 600. So they simply go shoot 5-600 rounds in place of 30. Did they save money ? Yes, they wisely got the price per cartridge to drop from 20 cents per to les than 10 cents per round. But their pockets are empty because they
then chose to spend all their savings by shooting more. A lot more.
So don't lay that personal decision at the feet of reloading. You will save money. The
real question is what will you do with the savings ?