The answer is affirmative and we can go even further!
Theorem. Let $\bar{b} := \tilde{\nu}(a)+2$, where
$$
\tilde{\nu}(a):= \begin{cases}\nu_{5}\left(a-1 \right) & \text{if} \hspace{3mm} a \equiv 1\pmod{5} \\ \nu_{5}\left(a^{2}+1\right) & \text{if} \hspace{3mm} a \equiv 2,3 \pmod{5} \\ \nu_{5}\left(a+1 \right) & \text{if} \hspace{3mm} a \equiv 4\pmod{5} & . \\ \nu_{2}\left(a^{2}-1\right)-1 & \text{if} \hspace{3mm} a \equiv 5 \pmod{10}\\
0 & \text{if} \hspace{3mm} a \equiv 0\pmod{10} \end{cases}
$$
[$\nu_p(a)$ indicates the $p$-adic valuation of the argument, as usual.]*
In radix-$10$ (i.e., considering the usual decimal numeral system), for any positive integer tetration base $a$, the tetration $^{\bar{b}}a$ (i.e., $a^{a^{a^{\dots}}}$ ($\bar{b}$-times)) originates at least $\bar{b}-2$ stable digits, where we call "stable digits" the last digits belonging to the "fixed sequence" referred by the OP.
Proof. If $a$ is a multiple of $10$, the proof is trivial (see Congruence speed of tetration bases ending with $0$ for a general formula of the number of stable digits frozen by any unit increment of the hyperexponent).
Now, assume that $a \in \mathbb{N}-\{0,1\}$ is not a multiple of $10$, and then the congruence speed, $V(a, b)$ of $^{b}a$ (see The congruence speed formula) is always constant at height $b \geq \bar{b}$ (mine is just a sufficient but not necessary condition on the hyperexponent size for the constancy of the congruence speed of $a$, see Number of stable digits of any integer tetration) and it is also a positive integer.
Thus, let us write $b \geq \bar{b} \Rightarrow V(a,b) = V(a)$, and in general we have $V(a, b)\geq 1$ as long as $b > 1$ (i.e, if $a=2$, then $V(2,1) =V(2,2) = 0$ and $V(2,b) = V(2) = 1$ iff $b \geq 2$).
Consequently, for any $b > 1$, $^{b}a$ is characterized by at least $b-2$ stable digits at the end of the result, and then we can get infinitely many stable digits for each $a$ as $b$ is free to run over the positive integers.
For example, Theorem 2.3 of Graham's number stable digits: an exact solution proves that the well-known Graham's number, $G:=g_{64}$, has exactly $slog_3{(G)}-1$ stable digits, where $slog_3{(G)}$ indicates (integer) super-logarithm base $3$ of $G$ (see Definition 2.1 of the above-mentioned preprint), since $V(3,1)=0$ and $V(3,2)=V(3,3)=V(3)=1$.