It does, but so does CAT6 if you think about it. Cable installers would be able to do either.
I've had mine installed by a low-voltage installer. Charged me $200 per drop for fiber vs. $150 for CAT6A. However, each Fiber drop has 3x duplex outlets (i.e. 6 strands, 2 for each port), so it's actually cheaper than CAT6 per port. And it's cheaper overall even if you just use 1 of the ports if you run 10Gb over it (10Gb CAT6 transceivers are about $70 more expensive per port pair compared to 10Gb Fiber transceivers).
However, you can just also run pre-terminated OS2 or OM4 fiber with LC-LC connectors as well - those connectors are small enough to pull through walls.
Also keep in mind fiber always terminates into a male plug - both custom or pre-terminated. It's not like CAT6 where building cabling terminate into female and loose cables terminate into male. With fiber you plug in the building male end of the cable into the back of a female-female coupler, so that you have a female end facing out to the room where you can plug in another fiber cable. i.e. these:
So there is no specific benefit like there is with custom length CAT6 that terminates into a punchdown block. Of course you can get more exact lengths with custom cabling, but you can just overbuy and then leave a rolled up portion behind the drywall.