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If you’re looking to buy an AV receiver to power your surround sound system, then there’s one class-leading brand that will no doubt feature on your shortlist. Denon AVRs are synonymous with high-quality home cinema, and for good reason: the regularly refreshed line-up combines exhaustive feature lists with equally compelling performance and options to suit every budget and set-up.
The current offering of Denon home cinema amps includes models from the past two years and spans three different ranges. There’s the limited edition A Series, released in 2020 to coincide with the company’s 110th anniversary; the X Series of mid-to-high-end receivers with top-quality components and format support; and the S Series of mid-range to affordable amps for smaller systems and budgets.
The products featured on this list may be the very latest that Denon has to offer, but such is the calibre of the company’s AVRs that older versions tend to remain on the market long after being superseded. While we won’t list every single amp that the company’s ever built, it’s certainly worth exploring reviews of previous models as some could be well worth consideration.
Before we get started, a quick note that Denon makes both AVR and AVC versions of some of its home cinema amps; the only difference is that the R products have an FM receiver built-in and tend to be made for the US market – though the UK does also get some AVRs.
Want to know everything about Denon’s most recent AVRs and AVCs? Allow us to run through all of the highlights and break down the details of the models in the line-up to find out which is the one that best suits your needs.
Next Gen gaming and video features
Denon tends to refresh its home cinema amps every year or so, and with good reason. Technology ages quickly, and three years can see dramatically different customer expectations. In just the last couple of years, we’ve seen the arrival of 8K TVs and next-gen gaming consoles, for example, both of which are designed to take advantage of new, more advanced video formats.
You may think of your AV receiver as primarily an audio product, but as it sits at the centre of a home cinema system, connecting every component to the screen, it’s vital that it can handle every video format that’s thrown at it – or that might be thrown at it within the next few years.
In this respect, Denon excels with the entire X-range, the AVR-S960 and the limited edition A-model, all offering 8K@60Hz passthrough and upscaling, as well as 4K@120Hz.
Gamers will be pleased to know that across its three ranges, Denon boasts extensive support for other next-gen gaming features such as ALLM (Auto Low-Latency Mode), VRR (Variable Refresh Rate), QMS (Quick Media Switching) and QFT (Quick Frame Transport), right down to the AVR-S960H. The two models below lose most of those features but do support ALLM.
HDMI 2.1…almost
Unfortunately, despite going to great lengths to ensure its amps are at the cutting edge of video technology, Denon was afflicted by last year’s notorious HDMI 2.1 bug (which also hit Denon stablemate Marantz, as well as Yamaha and others). The glitch causes a loss of picture when 4K@120Hz signals are sent from an Xbox Series X or Nvidia RTX30-series graphics cards and affects 2020 models from the A-Series and X-Series plus the AVR-S960H.
Sound United, Denon’s parent company, says it has been “working tirelessly” to address this long-running HDMI issue, and thankfully receivers manufactured after May 2021 are now officially glitch-free. The new models can be identified by series numbers that read xxxxx700001 and upwards and should be fully functioning as they boast an upgraded HDMI 2.1 chip. Those with older affected units can get hold of Sound United’s external HDMI adaptor, which contains the new chip and corrects the bug.