The boring and safe answer is that it's a judgement call. However I think we can identify a few heuristics to help with this judgement. Therefore, feel free to flag if you think that:
the post should be mod-deleted (deleted by a moderator so as to prevent undeletion by other users);
AND the issue is serious enough that moderators might want to investigate the user;
AND the issues with the post are easy to overlook, so if the post were undeleted, it would remain visible on the site for a while before someone else flagged it.
The above is meant to strike a balance between making moderators aware of potentially problematic behavior — regardless of whether the self-deletion will count as a mitigating circumstance —, and at the same time avoiding flags on posts that aren't causing immediate harm to the site and/or unlikely to require any moderator action. As a corollary, please do NOT fish out deleted posts from SEDE and go on a flag spree. The advice contained in this post is meant for users who organically come across self-deleted posts. If it's self-deleted and you have to go out of your way to find it, then leave it be.
If a post fails to meet one or more of the above conditions it probably doesn't need to be flagged. At the very least, it should prompt a more careful evaluation on your side.
As a non-exhaustive example, self-deleted post that usually pass this test are:
chatGPT / AI-generated answers: these are rather easy to miss if you aren't specifically on the lookout for it. To be fair, it's likely that someone will catch and flag other visible posts sooner than later, so flagging self-deleted posts isn't urgent. However there are no definite guarantees that visible posts will be flagged; and moderators going through a user's post list might prioritize visible answers and move past already deleted ones. In this case it's useful to remind us to mod-delete those too.
plagiarism: plagiarism is notoriously hard to spot, and it may be more spread out over time or over posts. It's best to catch it whenever we can instead of waiting for other visible posts to be noticed and flagged. Having flags on these posts also make it easier to collect stats and gauge the seriousness of the issue for a certain user.
On the other hand, self-deleted posts that don't pass the test, and therefore require more thought/evidence to decide if flagging is appropriate, are:
self-promotion: this is sort of a grey area and flagging depends on how close the post is to being spam. If it's blatant unsalvageable spam, it could've been a spammer testing the waters, then moderators might want to destroy the account for good measure. Ask yourself how much harm would the post do the site if it were undeleted? Is it sneaky malicious self-promotion, or is it a user who omitted to disclose affiliation in an otherwise acceptable answer? In the latter case, the author perhaps deleted the post because they were made aware of site rules elsewhere and are considering how to properly edit it; here flagging could be premature.
rudeness: same reasoning as above, with the addendum that the rude behavior may have been emotional, ergo transitory. As soon as the OP comes to their senses, they realize their mistake and self-delete in shame. There's no urgent need to bring this to moderators' attention.
In general, don't flag Not An Answer (NAA) and Very Low Quality (VLQ) posts. If a link-only answer looks like self-promotion, it falls under the previous category.