It didn't take long for the store bought ammo prices to make me consider reloading. Reloading has a "startup" cost for the equipment but if you shoot much, then the savings will quickly add up...
...even with 9mm. The folks who proclaim that "there's no savings in reloading 9mm" either get their ammo at unbelievable cheap prices (not at Wal-Mart) or they need to brush up on their math skills. Simple equipment can be less than $200. I got a little higher grade equipment for two pistol calibers, with a number of bells and whistles, for slightly less than $600 - and recouped the initial investment in less than one year and 4000 rounds of 9mm reloads. Plus, I now shoot ammo which has been custom tuned to my pistols.
I had one Tula (or it may have been Monarch) primer failure out of 200 rounds of their ammo. I found this to be interesting because I've had zero failures when I've used their primers in around 2000 of my reloads.
In some of my store bought "plinking" ammo testing, I found the Remington UMC and Winchester grouped slightly better than Federal, Tula and RWS. I also good some good groups from Blazer Brass. My results using my pistol(s). Your pistol may like totally different ammo.