Yes and no.
Gonna nerd out here, excuse me. Free will would, from my perspective (uh oh here we go, subjectivity!), mean that you have high bodily autonomy, knowing that your actions are your actions. But when you dig into the principles of the universe, or wacky physics laws that I cannot explain well enough, you do not have free will or agency. Firstly, you're bound to time, and time is something we will probably never control, among many other laws of nature.
How are we free if we eventually die from outside forces we cannot control? The problem with this is, even from a perspective of, oh well everything's bound to time so let's ignore that, you still don't really have free will.
You were created against your own will, whether or not you view that positively is up to you, and generally your parent's genetics play some part in your future. Though that's up for debate on your destiny, which I believe it's generally accepted that you aren't completely bound to them.
I still think that we have some degree of autonomy. We can choose what we do, and sometimes we can choose how we react to external stimuli.
But I also believe that people misunderstand what free will really means.
The problem is that we're tiny vessels in what is an almost infinitely large void and determining what is free will within this void that is all moving towards an already predetermined future, is kind of hard to do.
Things break into larger structures, so large you couldn't even imagine, so large a few of these structures violate cosmological principles. Some so small, that they cannot be observed, and are complex mathematical equations that make no sense. Ugh, I try not to dip my toes into quantum physics because it is confusing, but it will rattle your mind.