Room approximately 12' x 15'. Lots of furniture. The speakers will be about 9' away from the listening position. Listen at moderate volumes most of the time. Not sure what I will be using for speakers yet. Plan on buying speakers as well. From what I've read speakers are around 85 - 90 db sensitivity for 1 watt at 1 meter. Is that a realistic range?
Thanks.
Okay, you need to select your speakers before you decide how much power you need. The range you selected is certainly possible, and is very common. But you do not need an amplifier to drive some possible speaker that you are not actually going to use, so you have to select a speaker before anyone can tell you how much power you really need. Of course, if you had money to burn, you could just buy the most powerful amplifier you could find, and be sure that you had more than enough power for most speakers, but that would be quite expensive to do.
Also, you need to have enough power for the loudest you ever want to play it, not just what you will do most of the time. Of course, the speakers you select must be able to play as loud as you ever want to play them, too.
My advice is to look for speakers that you like, and try to put the vast majority of your money in your speakers. If the speakers you select are terribly inefficient or a low impedance, then you will need to rethink the matter, because that would mean spending extra on your amplification. But if you select something that is an easy impedance and of normal efficiency, for normal volumes you can use a fairly inexpensive amplifier. My advice is to not pay attention to those factors while looking for speakers, as you want the best sound possible, and impedance and efficiency have nothing whatever to do with sound quality. Of course, you do need to pay attention to those things before you part with your money, but it will only be an issue if you ended up liking difficult speakers. In my case, going for the sound I liked best (at my price point), without regard to such matters, got me speakers that happen to be an easy load for amplifiers.
In my case, I have Aurum Cantus (U.S. version) speakers and SVS subwoofers, and they retail for well over $6000. I was using a receiver that retailed for around $600 with them, and it sounded great (as it should, with such expensive speakers). I replaced the receiver with something that retails for about $1600 because I wanted more features. It sounds the same, unless I engage a feature that affects the sound. The more expensive receiver is capable of putting out about twice the power of the older one, but since my speakers are an easy impedance and of normal efficiency, I have no need of the extra power. It could play louder than I ever wanted it before.
If I were doing stereo only, I could use a very inexpensive receiver with my speakers and have good sound. Buying used, I would not need to spend even $100 on a receiver. One pair of the speakers retailed for $1500. Unless the speakers are inefficient or a low impedance, an extreme ratio like that will give you the best sound you can get for your money. No matter how much you spend on speakers, you will not be able to get a frequency response as flat as an inexpensive receiver, nor will you be able to get distortion levels of your speaker as low.
But the long and the short of it is that you need to select the speakers before you concern yourself with what the amplifier needs to be capable of doing.