You cannot yet get a guarantee of 1 logical gate-model qubit, no, but Amazon Braket will let you submit problems to D-Wave machines right now, with >5000 annealing qubits available.
D-Wave is seeing really promising results with optimization problems and materials simulation. The real barrier to entry right now is not access to the machines, or the middleware needed to use them - it's the ability to actually harness Binary Quadratic Model or Discrete Quadratic Model problems to apply to something that delivers real ROI.
There is a lot of training material available, but there's still a difficult road between systems that mathematicians and computational physicists can work with, and systems that are turn-key enough for a business analyst with a stats background to integrate into a reporting or planning workflow. Of course, anything in software that is a 'difficult road' is also potentially a goldmine for anyone that pulls it off.