Someday, astronauts will have safe, anytime access to space without the risk of the "bends" or need of an airlock. With recent progress in the development of the Single-Person Spacecraft (SPS), "someday" could be very soon. This will be a welcomed improvement for servicing the aging International Space Station (ISS), satellites, telescopes, habitats, the deep space Gateway, and Mars mission vehicles. Today, it takes a long time for suited astronauts to get to the work site but with SPS there is no lengthy pre-breathe, depressurizing an airlock, or handover hand translation. Instead, astronauts fly directly to the site spending more time on the job rather than in preparation or translating back and forth. Furthermore, the SPS is designed for crew autonomy providing an information-rich cockpit with displays and controls to assist with infrequent and unplanned tasks. This new capability is moving closer to reality and the purpose of this paper is to describe the recent engineering accomplishments leading to flight testing.