I have peered down the road of home development a time or two in the past. As a matter of fact, I have a couple of developing tanks and other various paraphernalia along with an unopened bag of D-76. However the mixing tools and measuring tools when added to the storage containers for mixed chemicals. And then add in the chemicals the cost was way over 100 bucks. I can get 20 rolls developed at my lab for that. Not that I don't want to learn the whole processing side of the hobby. Heck, my basement is light tight without any modifications. Guess I am not quite ready to jump off that cliff yet.
Only develop your own film when you feel good and ready.
It’s a big step when you do it for the first few times.
Do you know any other analogue photographers near to you?
It really helps to have a darkroom buddy to help you through the first couple of times and then be available to turn to when the inevitable “what the heck is wrong with these

” moments happen (we have ALL been there)
There really is nothing like watching carefully a more experienced guy to it and then you can have a go while he/she watches you.
An experienced darkroom buddy saves an awful lot of “character building experiences”
I would recommend an evening course at a local college – its where most people learned – but I am not sure many are doing film any more
It isn’t the cost that should drive you to do your own, it is the sense of achievement in owning the whole process from loading the film to hanging your pictures.
There is something indescribably thrilling when you open the tank after the development process and there they are – some of your own negs smiling back at you. It still thrills me and I have been doing it for more than 30 years.
Most professional photographers don’t bother with their own Developing and Processing, for them its just not financially effective to bother.
So it’s not a question of whether you are a “real photographer” just because you do/don’t process your own films.
In the end it’s a personal choice, some (like me) love it, while others loathe it.
Have fun
Martin
