The bummer about handloading for an autopistol is retrieving your brass. I don't reload for my little 380, which is a good thing as it flings it's brass all over hell's half-acre. ....
The good thing about reloading is all the free brass you get by mistake, that you someday might use. Simply picking up my spent .40 and 9mak cases would always give me a few 380's in the mix by mistake. A few months later and I now have a 380, so look in my pile of brass, and surprise.... couple hundred 380 cases already there! Thanks for leaving them for us! (And thanks to all those that leave 40's and 45's as well!)
My reloading costs using Berry's Plated bullets:
S&W 500, powder .12, primer .03, bullet .21, = .36 each
40 S&W, powder .015, primer .03, bullet .11 = .155 each
9 mak, (9x18) powder .012, primer .03, bullet .11 = .152 each
Switching to my own cast lead brings the cost of the bullet down to less than a penny for most rounds, and .015 (+ .03 for GC) for 440gr bullets that the 500 uses. So, S&W 500 = .20, 40S&W = .055, 9mak = .05
BTW, best prices I found for online haz materials is Grafs when used with C&R license.
An example =
5000 primers $120 (+ one time hazmat of $27.50) = $147.50 or 3 cents each.
4lbs W231 $63 (haz mat paid, so add order shipping of $15) = $78 or roughly $20 a pound, or .003 per grain.
EDIT: Forgot to add the best part. My groups were cut in half (or better) simply by switching from factory jacketed or berrys plated to cast lead properly sized to barrel.