Yes, for a temporary fix. While it's helped me, I'd argue a vast majority of people do not need chiro care, even those that see a chiro regularly.
Several times during sports, I had hips that slid out of alignment and they put pressure on the nerves surrounding them which caused agonizing pain after the adrenaline wore off. Chiro care helped to move my hips back to good alignment temporarily and relieved the acute pain stemming from the nerve pressure, but strengthening the muscles that were weak around my hips and allowing my hips to shift out of alignment was the actual long term fix.
Doing glute raises, bird dogs, side planks, and a standing desk were 95% of the fix, while chiro care I attribute the other 5%. In other words, chiro care can work in the moment, but your overall strength and conditioning program will actually fix your issue.
That follows logical sense too, if you see a chiro for ten minutes and then go and spend 7 hours and 50 minutes folded up like a pretzel in an office chair, don't be surprised if you're stiff when you stand up.
Before having someone crack your back, I would start with figuring out if your misalignment is actually a problem. I wouldn't worry about a misalignment unless it's actually causing pain such as putting pressure on a nerve. The human body isn't a perfect symmetrical system and it doesn't have to be unless it's impairing movement or causing pain.
Then figure out why you're out of alignment. Is one side too weak leading to excess flexibility? Is one side much stronger than the other side leading to tightness?
Stretch what's too tight, and strengthen what's too loose. Emphasize the strengthening. Stretching is easy, but rarely works long term for an imbalance.
Disclaimer for needing to find a good chiro, preferably one who lifts or does sports, because there are a lot of quacks out there and none of the above is medical advice.