You can and will find that kind of difference between same-brand and same type tubes....and more. If they were sold to you as a matched set, they clearly are not. If
within one amp you can swap the tubes A > B and then B > A and the current mismatch follows the swap, there is nothing wrong with your amp.
I once bought a garage of electronic parts. In that pile of stuff were perhaps 30 6L6Gs, NOS, JAN Sylvania. Brand new in their boxes. I knew they would NOT be good choices for your typical Super or Twin Reverb because of their low max voltage ratings and in general, rough usage. But I had enough of them so that I figured I'd build a tube matcher that would show static current through two tubes in a way that I could take pix and thus sell the relatively undesirable 6L6Gs on ebay if I could find matched sets. Bot 2 identical new meters but otherwise made the tube matcher from junk parts.

So, I started on my pile of 6L6Gs. I was rather amazed, they were all over the place, and I mean all over. Same conditions: 22 ma vs 43 ma, giant differences. THat's a solid double. Now I grant you, these were 60 year old tubes; but they were all Sylvania, JAN, identical date codes, whole thing. I'll also grant that tubes made in the 60's/70's are probably made to tighter tolerances and thus ANY old pair probably match better than the above 30-40% difference. But there you go. Arbitrarily, I decided that I wanted any pair to be within 2 mils of each other. Out of maybe 30 tubes, I think I was able to produce only 5-6 pairs. They were really all over the place.