Tech
Marantz A/V Separates Herald a New Era of Home Theater Where Luxury and Performance Finally Align
This story was sponsored and fact checked by Marantz
Marantz is redefining what reference level home theater looks and sounds like for today’s listener. The focus is no longer on excess hardware or visual dominance, but on delivering uncompromising performance, meticulous tuning, and premium build quality within a refined, contemporary industrial design that complements modern living spaces. It is theater-grade sound, executed with intention and restraint.
That philosophy comes into full view with the introduction of the AV30 and AMP30, completing Marantz’s new A/V separate series alongside the AV10 and AMP10 and the AV20 and AMP20. The result is a deliberately tiered lineup of preamp/processors and multi-channel amplifiers offering mix-and-match configurations, including support for immersive layouts up to 9.4.6 Dolby Atmos.
Whether building a reference system from the ground up or integrating selectively with the Cinema Series AVRs to add power where it matters most, Marantz has designed an ecosystem that scales performance with consistent visual elegance.
Execution matters at this level, and Marantz’s latest A/V separates reflect that standard. All components are engineered and manufactured at the Marantz Shirakawa Audio Works facility in Japan, and each product is certified by a Marantz Sound Master, currently Yoshinori Ogata, to ensure tuning accuracy, consistency, and performance integrity.
The result is a modern reference platform that prioritizes sound quality, visual refinement, and long term relevance, delivering premium home theater without the traditional equipment rack mentality and signaling clearly where Marantz believes high-end A/V performance belongs today.
From Foundational Engineering to Modern Reference Home Theater
The current Marantz A/V separates continue the ethos, engineering discipline, and design principles established by founder Saul Marantz beginning in 1953. Most notably, the Marantz Model 9 from 1960 introduced the porthole and architectural symmetry that remain defining elements of the 2026 lineup. From the outset, Marantz established a clear technical philosophy centered on precise power control, stability under load, and system designs that balance performance with usability.
Inspired by the proportion and resonance of musical instruments, Marantz components use symmetry not as a stylistic gesture but as a visual expression of control and order, reinforcing the central role of sound rather than competing with it. The iconic porthole carries that same philosophy forward. Originally a functional window for an analog VU meter, it has evolved into a modern aperture into the heart of the component, maintaining a sense of connection between listener and system whether the technology inside is analog or digital.
The warmth long associated with Marantz sound is equally present in its physical form. Materials, finishes, and color choices are selected to feel inviting rather than clinical, while controls are designed to respond with precision and confidence in hand. Anchoring it all is the Marantz mark, placed deliberately at the pinnacle of each product as a quiet statement of lineage and intent.
As formats evolved and system complexity increased, Marantz expanded its engineering and tuning operations, reinforcing a culture of precision and consistency. Rather than treating home theater as a departure from high-fidelity design, Marantz applied its amplification expertise directly to multichannel systems, focusing on clarity, spatial coherence, and controlled dynamics across increasingly demanding channel counts.
A key technical milestone followed with the development of Hyper Dynamic Amplifier Module technology. Created as a discrete alternative to conventional integrated circuits, HDAM established Marantz’s approach to faster signal response, wider bandwidth, and more precise dynamic control—an architecture that continues to define the brand’s amplification.
That lineage is carried forward in Marantz’s latest A/V separates, which translates decades of amplification and tuning expertise into reference-level home theater as it is experienced today.
A Tiered Reference System Designed for Modern Home Theater
Marantz’s current A/V separates are designed as a deliberately tiered system rather than a single statement product. The lineup comprises three preamp processors, the AV10, AV20, and AV30, and three multichannel power amplifiers, the AMP10, AMP20, and AMP30, allowing system builders to scale performance while maintaining a consistent design and tuning philosophy.
The newest additions, the AV30 and AMP30, serve as the most accessible entry point in the lineup, complemented by the AV20 and AMP20 and the flagship AV10 and AMP10. Together, they form three clearly defined performance tiers that allow systems to scale without sacrificing a unified design language or tuning philosophy.
Signal integrity, tonal balance, and amplification control are consistent across the Marantz separates range. The differences come down to channel capacity. The AV30 supports up to 7.4.4 Dolby Atmos processing, the AV20 adds 2 additional height or surround channels, and the flagship AV10 expands that by another 2 channels. The amplifier lineup follows the same logic: the AMP30 provides 6 channels, the AMP20 offers 12, and the AMP10 tops the range with 16. All amplifier channels are rated at 200 watts into 8 ohms and support bi-amping or bridging, which doubles output to 400 watts per channel.
With support for immersive configurations from 11 to 15 channels, Marantz A V separates are well suited to high-performance living spaces and dedicated theaters where integration, efficiency, and visual restraint matter as much as output. Their focus is consistency, maintaining clarity, stability, and coherence as channel counts and speaker demands increase. All three AMP models also provide a flexible upgrade path for Marantz Cinema Series AVR owners who need additional power or channel expansion.
The result is a separates platform defined by flexibility rather than hierarchy. Whether beginning with the AV30 and AMP30 or building toward a flagship configuration, each tier reflects the same approach to amplification, tuning, and industrial design.
AV30 and AMP30: A Modern Entry Point to Marantz Reference Home Theater
Marantz reinforces its tiered separates strategy with the AV30 and AMP30 by addressing a buyer who wants a high-performance home theater that is equally capable with film, music, and modern displays. Positioned as the most accessible entry point in the Marantz separates lineup, the pairing is designed to deliver the core elements that matter at this level: format flexibility, system integration, and the ability to adapt as the system and room evolve.
The AV30 serves as the system’s control center, supporting the surround formats that define today’s premium home theater, including Dolby Atmos, DTS X, Auro 3D, and IMAX Enhanced. Four independent subwoofer outputs allow precise low-frequency integration and compatibility with advanced room optimization such as Dirac Live ART. On the video side, support for HDR10, HDR10+, Dolby Vision, HLG, and Dynamic HDR pass-through ensures full compatibility with modern displays and high-quality sources.
Beyond home theater, the AV30 is designed to integrate easily into everyday listening. It supports a wide range of streaming services, including Amazon Music, TIDAL, Deezer, Napster, and SoundCloud, Qobuz Connect, and is Roon Ready for library-based playback. HEOS enables multiroom integration, while Bluetooth, Apple AirPlay 2, and Wi-Fi provide straightforward access across devices and use cases.
Paired with the AV30, the AMP 30 delivers controlled, scalable amplification for modern multichannel systems. Its six-channel Class D design provides up to 200 watts per channel, reinforced by Marantz’s HDAM-SA2 circuitry for stability and tonal consistency. Systems can grow by adding additional AMP30 units or pairing with higher-channel-count amplifiers such as the AMP20, while support for bi-amp and bridge-tied load configurations and both XLR and RCA inputs keeps integration straightforward.
Taken together, the AV30 and AMP30 form a cohesive foundation for buyers considering an $8,000 separates investment. As a system, they deliver modern surround processing, refined low-frequency control, scalable amplification, and seamless integration with both home theater and whole-home audio environments.
More importantly, they reflect Marantz’s long-standing priorities; clarity, control, and thoughtful system design applied to the realities of contemporary home theater, where performance must coexist with flexibility and long-term relevance.
Tip: In the coming weeks our Editor-at-Large, Chris Boylan will be releasing his hands-on review of the AV30, AMP30 and AMP20.
Price & Availability
Home Theater Preamplifier/Processors:
Multi-channel Power Amplifiers:
For more information, visit marantz.com