gdbyrd,
You can save a lot of money!
As long as you look at all the money you have invested in reloading gear as a savings account.
I'm doing real well saving.
I have $4550.50 savings in 125 sets of reloading dies and forming dies.
Also have a savings of $4350.00 in 136 bullet moulds.
Now if you do indeed want to save money, I suggest you find someone as dumb as me and ask him or her to reload for you.

I've been reloading since 1957 when I started using a Herters press in our old farm garage.
I see someone suggested RCBS.
You can't go wrong with RCBS.
However Lee has two presses, I am very much in favor of.
They are the two cast iron presses, one is single stage and the other is the turret.
They are both outstanding presses, as is the RCBS Jr and Rock Chucker.
I don't like Lee's alloy presses for anything except small basic jobs-ie seating bullets, crimping pistol ammunition.
You need to know how to reload to be able to shoot rifles like the Siamese mausers and various others for which ammunition is non existent or fairly high to buy, but easy to form and reload.
You have to shoot an awful lot of say 40 S&W to save any money when you can buy the loaded ammo for about $9.50 a box.
You have to ask yourself-Do I enjoy things like reloading?
If you do then its a hobby. As a business I don't think you'd make it.
Just my, maybe warped, opinion.
FWIW
DaveP kywoodwrkr