I believe this is "always" rather than often when it comes to the actual operations defined by the FP standard. gcc does play it fast and loose (as -ffast-math is not yet enabled by default, and FMA on the other hand is), but this is technically illegal and at least can be easily configured to be in standards-compliant mode.
I think the bigger problem comes from what is _not_ documented by the standard. E.g. transcendental functions. A program calling plain old sqrt(x) can find itself behaving differently _even between different stepping of the same core_, not to mention that there are well-known differences between AMD vs Intel. This is all using the same binary.