There is no standard. The amount of class A can vary from less than a watt to a couple of watts and sometimes more.
Note that the class A rating is usually for a solid state amp at 8 ohms. It's less as the impedance drops.
Also note that most class A amps are really very rich class AB amps where the rating is just the class A rating and they produce more power but in AB. As an example PASS makes 30 watt amps that are rated at 30 watts class A but often produce more than twice as many watts in AB so almost all the time they are in A but on peaks they go to AB.
As implied previously most class A amps that really are class A into 8 ohms are not as the load impedance drops. The only one I'm reasonably sure was is the old Mark Levinson ML2 which was rated at 25 watts class A and was still class A at 100 watts into 2 ohms.
Note that the class A rating is usually for a solid state amp at 8 ohms. It's less as the impedance drops.
Also note that most class A amps are really very rich class AB amps where the rating is just the class A rating and they produce more power but in AB. As an example PASS makes 30 watt amps that are rated at 30 watts class A but often produce more than twice as many watts in AB so almost all the time they are in A but on peaks they go to AB.
As implied previously most class A amps that really are class A into 8 ohms are not as the load impedance drops. The only one I'm reasonably sure was is the old Mark Levinson ML2 which was rated at 25 watts class A and was still class A at 100 watts into 2 ohms.