424B3 1 gold.htm

PROSPECTUS

April 30, 2002

MFS Regatta Gold

Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.) and Sun Life of Canada (U.S.) Variable Account F offer the flexible payment deferred annuity contracts and certificates described in this Prospectus to groups and individuals.

You may choose among a number of variable investment options and a range of fixed options. The variable options are Sub-Accounts in the Variable Account. Each Sub-Account invests in one of the following series of the MFS/Sun Life Series Trust (the ''Series Fund''), a mutual fund advised by our affiliate, Massachusetts Financial Services Company:

Bond Series

Managed Sectors Series

Capital Appreciation Series

Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Series

Capital Opportunities Series

Massachusetts Investors Trust Series

Emerging Growth Series

Mid Cap Growth Series

Emerging Markets Equity Series

Money Market Series

Global Asset Allocation Series

New Discovery Series

Global Governments Series

Research Series

Global Growth Series

Research Growth and Income Series

Global Telecommunications Series

Research International Series

Global Total Return Series

Strategic Growth Series

Government Securities Series

Strategic Income Series

High Yield Series

Technology Series

International Growth Series

Total Return Series

International Investors Trust Series

Utilities Series

 

Value Series

The fixed account options are available for specified time periods, called Guarantee Periods, and pay interest at a guaranteed rate for each period.

This Prospectus must be accompanied by a current prospectus for the Series Fund. Please read this Prospectus and the Series Fund prospectus carefully before investing and keep them for future reference. They contain important information about the Contracts and the Series Fund.

 

We have filed a Statement of Additional Information dated April 30, 2002 (the ''SAI'') with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the ''SEC''), which is incorporated by reference in this Prospectus. The table of contents for the SAI is on page 44 of this Prospectus. You may obtain a copy without charge by writing to us at the address shown below (which we sometimes refer to as our ''Annuity Mailing Address'') or by telephoning (800) 752-7215. In addition, the SEC maintains a website (http:// www.sec.gov) that contains the SAI, material incorporated by reference, and other information regarding companies that file with the SEC.

 

The Contracts are not deposits or obligations of, or guaranteed or endorsed by, any bank, and are not federally insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board, or any other agency.

The SEC has not approved or disapproved these securities or passed upon the accuracy or adequacy of this Prospectus. Any representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.

Any reference in this Prospectus to receipt by us means receipt at the following address:

     Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.)

     c/o Retirement Products and Services

     P.O. Box 9133

     Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

Page

Special Terms

4

Product Highlights

4

Expense Summary

7

Summary of Contract Expenses

7

Underlying Fund Annual Expenses

8

Examples

10

Condensed Financial Information

11

The Annuity Contract

11

Communicating to Us About Your Contract

12

Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.)

12

The Variable Account

12

Variable Account Options: The MFS/Sun Life Series Trust

13

The Fixed Account

15

The Fixed Account Options: The Guarantee Periods

15

The Accumulation Phase

15

     Issuing Your Contract

16

     Amount and Frequency of Purchase Payments

16

     Allocation of Net Purchase Payments

16

     Your Account

16

     Your Account Value

16

     Variable Account Value

16

     Fixed Account Value

17

     Transfer Privilege

18

     Waivers; Reduced Charges; Credits; Bonus Guaranteed Interest Rates

19

     Optional Programs

19

Withdrawals, Withdrawal Charge and Market Value Adjustment

21

     Cash Withdrawals

21

     Withdrawal Charge

22

     Alternate Withdrawal Charge

24

     Types of Withdrawals Not Subject to Withdrawal Charge

25

     Market Value Adjustment

25

Contract Charges

26

     Account Fee

26

     Administrative Expense Charge

26

     Mortality and Expense Risk Charge

26

     Premium Taxes

27

     Series Fund Expenses

27

     Modification in the Case of Group Contracts

27

Death Benefit

27

     Amount of Death Benefit

27

     Spousal Continuance

28

     Method of Paying Death Benefit

28

     Selection and Change of Beneficiary

28

     Payment of Death Benefit

29

     Due Proof of Death

29

The Income Phase - Annuity Provisions

29

     Selection of the Annuitant or Co-Annuitant

29

     Selection of the Annuity Commencement Date

29

     Annuity Options

30

     Selection of Annuity Option

31

     Amount of Annuity Payments

31

     Exchange of Variable Annuity Units

32

     Account Fee

32

     Annuity Payment Rates

32

     Annuity Options as Method of Payment for Death Benefit

32

Other Contract Provisions

33

     Exercise of Contract Rights

33

     Change of Ownership

33

     Death of Participant

33

     Voting of Series Fund Shares

34

     Periodic Reports

35

     Substitution of Securities

35

     Change in Operation of Variable Account

35

     Splitting Units

35

     Modification

35

     Limitation or Discontinuance of New Participants

36

     Reservation of Rights

36

     Right to Return

36

Tax Considerations

36

     U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations

37

          Deductibility of Purchase Payments

37

          Pre-Distribution Taxation of Contracts

37

          Distributions and Withdrawals from Non-Qualified Contracts

37

          Distributions and Withdrawals from Qualified Contracts

38

          Withholding

38

          Investment Diversification and Control

39

          Tax Treatment of the Company and the Variable Account

39

          Qualified Retirement Plans

39

          Pension and Profit-Sharing Plans

39

          Tax-Sheltered Annuities

39

          Individual Retirement Accounts

40

          Roth IRA

40

     Puerto Rico Tax Considerations

40

Administration of the Contracts

41

Distribution of the Contracts

41

Performance Information

41

Available Information

42

Incorporation of Certain Documents by Reference

43

State Regulation

43

Legal Proceedings

43

Accountants

44

Financial Statements

44

Table of Contents of Statement of Additional Information

44

Appendix A - Glossary

46

Appendix B - Condensed Financial Information - Accumulation Unit Values

49

Appendix C - Withdrawals, Withdrawal Charges and the Market Value Adjustment

54

 

 

 

 

 

 

SPECIAL TERMS

Your Contract is a legal document that uses a number of specially defined terms. We explain most of the terms that we use in this Prospectus in the context where they arise, and some are self-explanatory. In addition, for convenient reference, we have compiled a list of these terms in the Glossary included at the back of this Prospectus as Appendix A. If, while you are reading this Prospectus, you come across a term that you do not understand, please refer to the Glossary for an explanation.

PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS

The headings in this section correspond to headings in the Prospectus under which we discuss these topics in more detail.

The Annuity Contract

The Regatta Gold Fixed and Variable Annuity Contract provides a number of important benefits for your retirement planning. During the Accumulation Phase, you make Payments under the Contract and allocate them to one or more Variable Account or Fixed Account options. During the Income Phase, we make annuity payments to you or someone else based on the amount you have accumulated. The Contract provides tax-deferral so that you do not pay taxes on your earnings until you withdraw them. The Contract also provides a death benefit if you die during the Accumulation Phase.

The Accumulation Phase

Under most circumstances, you can buy the Contract with an initial Purchase Payment of $5,000 or more ($10,000 or more if you live in California, Maryland, or Texas), and you can make additional Purchase Payments of at least $1,000 at any time during the Accumulation Phase. We will not normally accept a Purchase Payment if your Account Value is over $1 million or, if the Purchase Payment would cause your Account Value to exceed $1 million.

Variable Account Options: The Funds

You can allocate your Purchase Payments among Sub-Accounts investing in a number of Fund options. Each Fund is a separate series of the MFS/Sun Life Series Trust, an open-end management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Our affiliate, Massachusetts Financial Services Company ("MFS"), serves as the investment adviser to the Series Fund. The investment returns on the Funds are not guaranteed. You can make or lose money. You can make transfers among the Funds and the Fixed Account Options.

The Fixed Account Options: The Guarantee Periods

You can allocate your Purchase Payments to the Fixed Account and elect to invest in one or more of the Guarantee Periods we make available from time to time. Each Guarantee Period earns interest at a Guaranteed Interest Rate that we publish. We may change the Guaranteed Interest Rate from time to time, but no Guaranteed Interest Rate will ever be less than the minimum guaranteed interest rate permitted by law. Once we have accepted your allocation to a particular Guarantee Period, we promise that the Guaranteed Interest Rate applicable to that allocation will not change for the duration of the Guarantee Period. We may offer Guarantee Periods of different durations or stop offering some Guarantee Periods. Once we stop offering a Guarantee Period of a particular duration, future allocations, transfers, or renewals into that Guarantee Period will not be permitted.

Expense Summary

The Contract has insurance features and investment features, and there are costs related to each.

Each year for the first five Account Years, we deduct an annual Account Fee equal to the lesser of $30 or 2% of your Account Value. After the fifth Account Year, we may increase the fee annually, but it will never exceed the lesser of $50 or 2% of your Account Value. During the Income Phase, the annual Account Fee is $30. We will not charge the annual Account Fee if your Account had been allocated only to the Fixed Account during the applicable Account Year, or your Account Value is more than $75,000 on your Account Anniversary.

We deduct a mortality and expense risk charge of 1.25% of the average daily value of the Contract invested in the Variable Account. We also deduct an administrative charge of 0.15% of the average daily value of the Contract invested in the Variable Account.

If you take more than a specified amount of money out of your Contract, we assess a withdrawal charge against each Purchase Payment withdrawn. The withdrawal charge (also known as a "contingent deferred sales charge") starts at 6% in the first Contract year and declines to 0% after seven years.

Currently, you can make 12 free transfers each year; however, we reserve the right to impose a charge of up to $15 per transfer.

In addition to the charges we impose under the Contract, there are also charges (which include management fees and operating expenses) imposed by the Funds, which range from 0.57% to 1.62% of the average daily net assets of the Fund, depending upon which Fund(s) you have selected.

The Income Phase: Annuity Provisions

If you want to receive regular income from your annuity, you can select one of a several Annuity Options. Subject to the Maximum Annuity Commencement Date, you can choose to receive annuity payments from either the Fixed Account or from the available Variable Account options. If you choose to have any part of your annuity payments come from the Variable Account, the dollar amount of the payments may fluctuate with the performance of the Funds. You decide when your Income Phase will begin but, once it begins, you cannot change your choice of annuity payment options.

Death Benefit

If you die before the Contract reaches the Income Phase, the beneficiary will receive a death benefit. The amount of the death benefit depends upon your age on the Contract Date. If you are 86 or older on your Contract Date, the death benefit is equal to the amount we would pay on a full surrender of your Contract ("Surrender Value"). If you are 85 or younger on your Contract Date, the death benefit pays the greatest of the following amounts: (1) your Account Value on your Death Benefit Date, (2) your Surrender Value on your Death Benefit Date, (3) your Account Value on the Seven-Year Account Anniversary (adjusted for subsequent payments, withdrawals, and charges), or (4) subject to certain limitations, your total Purchase Payments minus withdrawals, plus interest accrued on each payment and each withdrawal at 5%per year.

Withdrawals, Withdrawal Charge and Market Value Adjustment

You can withdraw money from your Contract during the Accumulation Phase. You may withdraw a portion of your Account Value each year without the imposition of a withdrawal charge. For any Account Year, this "free withdrawal amount" equals 10% of all Purchase Payments made during the last 7 Account Year (including the current Account Year), plus all Purchase Payments we have held for at least 7 Account Years. Withdrawals made from the Fixed Account may also be subject to a Market Value Adjustment (see prospectus under "Market Value Adjustment"). You may also have to pay income taxes and tax penalties on money you withdraw.

Right to Return

Your Contract contains a "free look" provision. If you cancel your Contract within 10 days after receiving it, we will send you, depending upon the laws of your state, either the full amount of all of your Purchase Payments or your Account Value as of the day we receive your cancellation request. (This amount may be more or less than the original Purchase Payment). We will not deduct a withdrawal charge or a Market Value Adjustment.

Tax Considerations

Your earnings are not taxed until you take them out. If you withdraw money during the Accumulation Phase, earnings come out first and are taxed as income. If you are younger than 59 1/2 when you take money out, you may be charged a 10% federal tax penalty.

--------

If you have any questions about your Contract or need more information, please contact us at:

     Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.)

     c/o Retirement Products and Services

     P. O. Box 9133

     Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481

     Toll Free (800) 752-7215

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EXPENSE SUMMARY

The purpose of the following table is to help you understand the costs and expenses that you will bear directly and indirectly under a Contract when you allocate money to the Variable Account. The table reflects expenses of the Variable Account as well as of each Series of the Series Fund. The table should be considered together with the narrative provided under the heading ''Contract Charges'' in this Prospectus, and with the Series Fund's prospectus. In addition to the expenses listed below, we may deduct premium taxes.

SUMMARY OF CONTRACT EXPENSES

Transaction Expenses

Sales Load Imposed on Purchase Payments

$    0

Deferred Sales Load (as a percentage of Purchase Payments withdrawn) (1)

 

 

Number of Account Years Purchase Payment in Account

 

 

    0-1

6%

 

    2-3

5%

 

    4-5

4%

 

    6

3%

 

    7 or more

0%

 

Transfer Fee (2)

$ 15

Annual Account Fee per Contract or Certificate

$ 30

Variable Account Annual Expenses (as a percentage of average Variable Account assets)

 

 

Mortality and Expense Risk Charge

1.25%

Administrative Expense Charge

0.15%

Other Fees and Expenses of the Variable Account

0.00%

Total Variable Account Annal Expenses

1.40%

_______________________

(1)

A portion of your Account may be withdrawn each year without imposition of any withdrawal charge, and after a Purchase Payment has been in your Account for 7 Account Years it may be withdrawn free of the withdrawal charge.

(2)

Currently, no fee is imposed upon transfers; however, we reseve the right to impose up to $15 per transfer. In addition, a Market Value Adjustment may be imposed on amounts transferred from or within the Fixed Account.

(3)

The annual Account Fee is equal to the lesser of $30 or 2% of your Account Value in Account Years 1 through 5; thereafter, the Account Fee may be changed annually, but it will not exceed the lesser of $50 or 2% of your Account Value.

UNDERLYING FUND ANNUAL EXPENSES 1

(numbers in brackets represent expenses before any fee waivers or expense reimbursements) 2

(as a percentage of Fund net assets)


FUND

MANAGEMENT FEES

OTHER FUND EXPENSES

TOTAL ANNUAL
FUND EXPENSES

 

 

 

 

Bond Series

0.60%

0.11%

0.71%

Capital Appreciation Series

0.73%

0.05%

0.78%

Capital Opportunities Series

0.71%

0.08%

0.79%

Emerging Growth Series

0.70%

0.06%

0.76%

Emerging Markets Equity Series

1.25%

0.37%

1.62%

Global Asset Allocation Series

0.75%

0.20%

0.95%

Global Governments Series

0.75%

0.23%

0.98%

Global Growth Series

0.90%

0.15%

1.05%

Global Telecommunications Series (3)

1.00%

0.25%

1.25%   [1.90%]

Global Total Return Series

0.75%

0.16%

0.91%

Government Securities Series

0.55%

0.07%

0.62%

High Yield Series

0.75%

0.09%

0.84%

International Growth Series

0.98%

0.25%

1.23%

International Investors Trust Series

0.98%

0.25%

1.23%

Managed Sectors Series

0.74%

0.10%

0.84%

Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Series

0.75%

0.07%

0.82%

Massachusetts Investors Trust Series

0.55%

0.05%

0.60%

Mid Cap Growth Series

0.75%

0.09%

0.84%

Money Market Series

0.50%

0.07%

0.57%

New Discovery Series

0.90%

0.07%

0.97%

Research Series

0.70%

0.06%

0.76%

Research Growth and Income Series

0.75%

0.12%

0.87%

Research International Series

1.00%

0.26%

1.26%

Strategic Growth Series

0.75%

0.11%

0.86%

Strategic Income Series

0.75%

0.26%

1.01%

Technology Series

0.75%

0.15%

0.90%

Total Return Series

0.65%

0.05%

0.70%

Utilities Series

0.71%

0.07%

0.78%

Value Series

0.75%

0.10%

0.85%

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

(1)

The information relating to Fund expenses was provided by the Fund and we have not independently verified it. You should consult the Fund prospectus for more information about Fund expenses. All expense figures are shown after expense reimbursements or waivers, except for the bracketed figures which show what the expense figures would have been absent reimbursement and waiver. All expense figures are based on actual expenses for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2001, except that the expense figures shown for Funds with less than 12 months of investment experience are estimates for the year 2002. Such a Fund is the Global Telecommunications Series.

 

 

(2)

Each Fund has an expense offset arrangement which reduces the Fund's custodian fee based upon the amount of cash maintained by the Fund with its custodian and dividend disbursing agent. Each Fund may enter into such other arrangements and directed brokerage arrangements (which would also have the effect of reducing the Fund's expenses). Any such fee reductions are not reflected under "Other Fund Expenses" in the table. Had these fee reimbursements been taken into account, "Total Annual Fund Expenses" for certain of the Funds would be as follows:

Bond Series

0.70%

Capital Opportunities Series

0.78%

Emerging Growth Series

0.75%

Emerging Markets Equity Series

1.61%

Global Governments Series

0.97%

Global Telecommunications Series

1.25%

Managed Sectors Series

0.83%

Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Series

0.81%

Research Series

0.75%

Strategic Income Series

1.00%

Technology Series

0.89%

(3)

MFS has contractually agreed to bear the expenses of the Global Telecommunications Series such that "Other Fund Expenses," after taking into account the expense offset arrangement described in Footnote (2), above, do not exceed 0.25% annually. These contractual fee arrangements will continue until at least May 1, 2003, unless changed with the consent of the Series Fund's Board of Directors; provided, however, that the Fund's contractual fee arrangement will terminate prior to May 1, 2003, in the event that the Fund's "Other Fund Expenses" equal or fall below 0.25% annually.

EXAMPLES

If you surrender your Contract at the end of the applicable time period, you would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming an average Contract size of $35,000 and a 5% annual return:

 

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

10 Years

Bond Series

$78

$108

$144

$258

Capital Appreciation Series

79

110

148

265

Capital Opportunities Series

79

111

148

266

Emerging Growth Series

79

110

147

263

Emerging Markets Equity Series

87

134

187

347

Global Asset Allocation Series

80

115

156

282

Global Governments Series

81

116

157

285

Global Growth Series

81

118

161

292

Global Telecommunications Series

83

124

170

312

Global Total Return Series

80

114

154

278

Government Securities Series

77

106

140

249

High Yield Series

79

112

151

271

International Growth Series

83

123

169

310

International Investors Trust series

83

123

169

310

Managed Sectors Series

79

112

151

271

Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Series

79

112

150

269

Massachusetts Investors Trust Series

77

105

139

247

Mid Cap Growth Series

79

112

151

271

Money Market Series

77

104

138

244

New Discovery Series

81

116

157

284

Research Series

79

110

147

263

Research Growth and Income Series

80

113

152

274

Research International Series

83

124

171

313

Strategic Growth Series

79

113

152

273

Strategic Income Series

81

117

159

288

Technology Series

80

114

154

277

Total Return Series

78

108

144

257

Utilities Series

79

110

148

265

Value Series

79

112

151

272

If you do not surrender your Contract, or if you annuitize at the end of the applicable time period, you would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming an average Contract size of $35,000 and a 5%

annual return:

1 Year

3 Years

5 Years

10 Years

Bond Series

$22

$69

$118

$258

Capital Appreciation Series

23

71

122

265

Capital Opportunities Series

23

72

123

266

Emerging Growth Series

23

71

121

263

Emerging Markets Equity Series

31

96

163

347

Global Asset Allocation Series

25

76

131

282

Global Governments Series

25

77

132

285

Global Growth Series

26

79

136

292

Global Telecommunications Series

28

85

145

312

Global Total Return Series

24

75

129

278

Government Securities Series

22

66

114

249

High Yield Series

24

73

125

271

International Growth Series

28

85

144

310

International Investors Trust series

28

85

144

310

Managed Sectors Series

24

73

125

271

Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Series

24

72

124

269

Massachusetts Investors Trust Series

21

66

113

247

Mid Cap Growth Series

24

73

125

271

Money Market Series

21

65

111

244

New Discovery Series

25

77

132

284

Research Series

23

71

121

263

Research Growth and Income Series

24

74

127

274

Research International Series

28

86

146

313

Strategic Growth Series

24

74

126

273

Strategic Income Series

25

78

134

288

Technology Series

24

75

128

277

Total Return Series

22

69

118

257

Utilities Series

23

71

122

265

Value Series

24

73

126

272

The Examples should not be considered to be representations of past or future expenses, and actual expenses may be greater or lower than those shown. The Examples assume that all current waivers and reimbursements continue throughout all periods.

CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION

Historical information about the value of the units we use to measure the variable portion of your Contract (''Variable Accumulation Units'') is included in the back of this Prospectus as Appendix B.

THE ANNUITY CONTRACT

Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.) (the ''Company'', ''we'' or ''us'') and Sun Life of Canada (U.S.) Variable Account F (the ''Variable Account'') offer the Contract on a group basis in connection with retirement plans. We issue a Group Contract to the Owner covering all individuals participating under the Group Contract. Each individual receives a Certificate that evidences his or her participation under the Group Contract.

In this Prospectus, unless we state otherwise, we refer to participating individuals under Group Contracts as ''Participants'' and we address Participants as ''you''; we use the term ''Contracts'' to include Group Contracts and Certificates issued under Group Contracts. For the purpose of determining benefits under the Contracts, we establish an Account for each Participant, which we will refer to as''your'' Account or a ''Participant Account.''

Your Contract provides a number of important benefits for your retirement planning. It has an Accumulation Phase, during which you make payments under the Contract and allocate them to one or more Variable Account or Fixed Account options, and an Income Phase, during which we make payments based on the amount you have accumulated. Your Contract provides tax deferral, so that you do not pay taxes on your earnings under your Contract until you withdraw them. It provides a death benefit if the Annuitant dies during the Accumulation Phase. Finally, if you so elect, during the Income Phase we will make payments to you or someone else for life or for another period that you choose.

You choose these benefits on a variable or fixed basis or a combination of both. When you choose Variable Account investment options or a Variable Annuity option, your benefits will be responsive to changes in the economic environment, including inflationary forces and changes in rates of return available from different types of investments. With these options, you assume all investment risk under the Contract. When you choose a Guarantee Period in our Fixed Account or a Fixed Annuity option, we assume the investment risk, except in the case of early withdrawals, where you bear the risk of unfavorable interest rate changes. You also bear the risk that the interest rates we will offer in the future and the rates we will use in determining your Fixed Annuity may not exceed our minimum guaranteed rate. Our minimum guaranteed interest rate will never be less than that permitted by law.

The Contract is designed for use in connection with retirement and deferred compensation plans, some of which qualify for favorable federal income tax treatment under Sections 401, 403, 408 or 408A of the Internal Revenue Code. The Contract is also designed so that it may be used in connection with certain non-tax-qualified retirement plans, such as payroll savings plans and such other groups (trusteed or nontrusteed) as may be eligible under applicable law. We refer to Contracts used with plans that receive favorable tax treatment as ''Qualified Contracts,'' and all others as ''Non-Qualified Contracts.''

COMMUNICATING TO US ABOUT YOUR CONTRACT

All materials sent to us, including Purchase Payments, must be sent to us at our Annuity Mailing Address as set forth on the first page of this Prospectus. For all telephone communications, you must call (800) 752-7215.

Unless this Prospectus states differently, we will consider all materials sent to us and all telephone communications to be received on the date we actually receive them at our Annuity Mailing Address. However, we will consider Purchase Payments, withdrawal requests and transfer instructions to be received on the next Business Day if we receive them (1) on a day that is not a Business Day or (2) after 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time.

When we specify that notice to us must be in writing, we reserve the right, at our sole discretion, to accept notice in another form.

SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA (U.S.)

We are a stock life insurance company incorporated under the laws of Delaware on January 12, 1970. We do business in 49 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, and we have an insurance company subsidiary that does business in New York. Our Executive Office mailing address is One Sun Life Executive Park, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481.

We are an indirect wholly-owned subsidiary of Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (''Sun Life (Canada)''). Sun Life (Canada) completed its demutualization on March 22, 2000. As a result of the demutualization, a new holding company, Sun Life Financial Services of Canada Inc. (''Sun Life Financial''), is now the ultimate parent of Sun Life (Canada) and the Company. Sun Life Financial, a corporation organized in Canada, is a reporting company under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 with common shares listed on the Toronto, New York, London, and Manila stock exchanges.

THE VARIABLE ACCOUNT

We established the Variable Account as a separate account on July 13, 1989, pursuant to a resolution of our Board of Directors. The Variable Account funds the Contract and various other variable annuity and variable life insurance product contracts which are offered by the Company and other affiliated and unaffiliated offerors. These other products may have features, benefits and charges that are different from those under the Contract.

Under Delaware insurance law and the Contract, the income, gains or losses of the Variable Account are credited to or charged against the assets of the Variable Account without regard to the other income, gains, or losses of the Company. These assets are held in relation to the Contracts described in this Prospectus and other variable annuity contracts that provide benefits that vary in accordance with the investment performance of the Variable Account. Although the assets maintained in the Variable Account will not be charged with any liabilities arising out of any other business we conduct, all obligations arising under the Contracts, including the promise to make annuity payments, are general corporate obligations of the Company.

The assets of the Variable Account are divided into Sub-Accounts. Each Sub-Account invests exclusively in shares of a specific Series of the MFS/Sun Life Series Trust (the ''Series Fund''). All amounts allocated to the Variable Account will be used to purchase Series Fund shares as designated by you at their net asset value. Any and all distributions made by the Series Fund with respect to the shares held by the Variable Account will be reinvested to purchase additional shares at their net asset value. Deductions from the Variable Account for cash withdrawals, annuity payments, death benefits, Account Fees, contract charges against the assets of the Variable Account for the assumption of mortality and expense risks, administrative expenses and any applicable taxes will, in effect, be made by redeeming the number of Series Fund shares at their net asset value equal in total value to the amount to be deducted. The Variable Account will be fully invested in Series Fund shares at all times.

VARIABLE ACCOUNT OPTIONS: THE MFS/SUN LIFE SERIES TRUST

The MFS/Sun Life Series Trust (the ''Series Fund'') is an open-end management investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940. Our affiliate, Massachusetts Financial Services Company (''MFS''), serves as the investment adviser to the Series Fund.

The Series Fund is composed of a number of independent portfolios of securities, each of which has separate investment objectives and policies. Shares of the Series Fund are issued in a number of Series, each corresponding to one of the portfolios. The Contracts provide for investment by the Sub-Accounts in shares of the Series of the Series Fund described below. Additional portfolios may be added to the Series Fund which may or may not be available for investment by the Variable Account.

Bond Series will mainly seek as high a level of current income as is believed to be consistent with prudent investment risk; its secondary objective is to seek to protect shareholders' capital.

Capital Appreciation Series will seek to maximize capital appreciation by investing in securities of all types, with major emphasis on common stocks.

Capital Opportunities Series will seek capital appreciation.

Emerging Growth Series will seek long-term growth of capital.

Emerging Markets Equity Series will seek capital appreciation.

Global Asset Allocation Series will seek total return over the long term through investments in equity and fixed income securities and will also seek to have low volatility of share price (i.e., net asset value per share) and reduced risk (compared to an aggressive equity/fixed income portfolio).

Global Governments Series will seek to provide moderate current income, preservation of capital and growth of capital by investing in debt obligations that are issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest by either (i) the U.S. Government, its agencies, authorities, or instrumentalities, or (ii) the governments of foreign countries (to the extent that the Series' adviser believes that the higher yields available from foreign government securities are sufficient to justify the risks of investing in these securities).

Global Growth Series will seek capital appreciation by investing in securities of companies worldwide growing at rates expected to be well above the growth rate of the overall U.S. economy.

Global Telecommunications Series will seek to achieve long-term growth of capital.

Global Total Return Series will seek total return by investing in securities which will provide above average current income (compared to a portfolio invested entirely in equity securities) and opportunities for long-term growth of capital and income.

Government Securities Series will seek current income and preservation of capital by investing in U.S. Government and U.S. Government-related securities.

High Yield Series will seek high current income and capital appreciation by investing primarily in certain lower rated or unrated securities (possibly with equity features) of U.S. and foreign issuers.

International Growth Series will seek capital appreciation.

International Investors Trust Series will seek long-term growth of capital with a secondary objective to seek reasonable current income.

Managed Sectors Series will seek capital appreciation by varying the weighting of its portfolio among 13 industry sectors.

Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Series will seek to provide long-term growth of capital and future income rather than current income.

Massachusetts Investors Trust Series will seek long-term growth of capital with a secondary objective to seek reasonable current income.

Mid Cap Growth Series will seek long-term growth of capital.

Money Market Series will seek maximum current income to the extent consistent with stability of principal by investing exclusively in money market instruments maturing in less than 13 months.

New Discovery Series will seek capital appreciation.

Research Series will seek to provide long-term growth of capital and future income.

Research Growth and Income Series will seek to provide long-term growth of capital, current income and growth of income.

Research International Series will seek capital appreciation.

Strategic Growth Series will seek capital appreciation.

Strategic Income Series will seek to provide high current income by investing in fixed income securities and will seek to take advantage of opportunities to realize significant capital appreciation while maintaining a

high level of current income.

Technology Series will seek capital appreciation.

Total Return Series will seek mainly to obtain above-average income (compared to a portfolio entirely invested in equity securities) consistent with prudent employment of capital; its secondary objective is to take advantage of opportunities for growth of capital and income since many securities offering a better than average yield may also possess growth potential.

Utilities Series will seek capital growth and current income (income above that available from a portfolio invested entirely in equity securities) by investing, under normal market conditions, at least 65% of its assets in equity and debt securities of both domestic and foreign companies in the utilities industry.

Value Series will mainly seek capital appreciation and reasonable income.

The Series Fund pays fees to MFS for its services pursuant to investment advisory agreements. MFS also serves as investment adviser to each of the funds in the MFS Family of Funds, and to certain other investment companies established by MFS and/or us. MFS Institutional Advisers, Inc., a wholly-owned subsidiary of MFS, provides investment advice to substantial private clients. MFS and its predecessor organizations have a history of money management dating from 1924. MFS operates as an autonomous organization and the obligation of performance with respect to the investment advisory and underwriting agreements (including supervision of the sub-advisers noted below) is solely that of MFS. We undertake no obligation in this regard.

MFS may serve as the investment adviser to other mutual funds which have similar investment goals and principal investment policies and risks as the Series, and which may be managed by a Series' portfolio manager(s). While a Series may have many similarities to these other funds, its investment performance will differ from their investment performance. This is due to a number of differences between a Series and these similar products, including differences in sales charges, expense ratios and cash flows.

The Series Fund also offers its shares to other separate accounts established by the Company and our New York subsidiary in connection with variable annuity and variable life insurance contracts. Although we do not anticipate any disadvantages to this arrangement, there is a possibility that a material conflict may arise between the interests of the Variable Account and one or more of the other separate accounts investing in the Series Fund. A conflict may occur due to differences in tax laws affecting the operations of variable life and variable annuity separate accounts, or some other reason. We and the Series Fund's Board of Trustees will monitor events for such conflicts, and, in the event of a conflict, we will take steps necessary to remedy the conflict, including withdrawal of the Variable Account from participation in the Series which is involved in the conflict or substitution of shares of other Series or other mutual funds.

More comprehensive information about the Series Fund and the management, investment objectives, policies, restrictions, expenses and potential risks of each Series may be found in the accompanying current prospectus of the Series Fund. You should read the Series Fund prospectus carefully before investing. The Series Fund's Statement of Additional Information is available by calling 1-800-752-7215.

THE FIXED ACCOUNT

The Fixed Account is made up of all the general assets of the Company other than those allocated to any separate account. Amounts you allocate to Guarantee Periods become part of the Fixed Account, and are available to fund the claims of all classes of our customers, including claims for benefits under the Contracts.

We will invest the assets of the Fixed Account in those assets we choose that are allowed by applicable state insurance laws. In general, these laws permit investments, within specified limits and subject to certain qualifications, in federal, state and municipal obligations, corporate bonds, preferred and common stocks, real estate mortgages, real estate and certain other investments. We intend to invest primarily in investment-grade fixed income securities (i.e. rated by a nationally recognized rating service within the four highest grades) or instruments we believe are of comparable quality. We are not obligated to invest amounts allocated to the Fixed Account according to any particular strategy, except as may be required by applicable state insurance laws. You will not have a direct or indirect interest in the Fixed Account investments.

THE FIXED ACCOUNT OPTIONS: THE GUARANTEE PERIODS

You may elect one or more Guarantee Period(s) from those we make available. From time to time, we may offer Guarantee Periods of different durations or stop offering some Guarantee Periods. Once we stop offering a Guarantee Period for a particular duration, allocations, transfers or renewals into that Guarantee Period will not be permitted. We publish Guaranteed Interest Rates for each Guarantee Period offered. We may change the Guaranteed Interest Rates we offer from time to time, but no Guaranteed Interest Rate will ever be less than the minimum guaranteed rate permitted by state law. Also, once we have accepted your allocation to a particular Guarantee Period, we promise that the Guaranteed Interest Rate applicable to that allocation will not change for the duration of the Guarantee Period.

We determine Guaranteed Interest Rates at our discretion. We do not have a specific formula for establishing the rates for different Guarantee Periods. Our determination will be influenced by the interest rates on fixed income investments in which we may invest with amounts allocated to the Guarantee Periods. We will also consider other factors in determining these rates, including regulatory and tax requirements, sales commissions and administrative expenses borne by us, general economic trends and competitive factors. We cannot predict the level of future interest rates.

We may from time to time at our discretion offer interest rate specials for new Purchase Payments that are higher than the rates we are then offering for renewals or transfers.

Early withdrawals from your allocation to a Guarantee Period, including cash withdrawals, transfers, and commencement of an annuity, may be subject to a Market Value Adjustment, which could decrease or increase the value of your Account. See ''Withdrawals, Withdrawal Charge and Market Value Adjustment.''

THE ACCUMULATION PHASE

During the Accumulation Phase of your Contract, you make payments into your Account, and your earnings accumulate on a tax-deferred basis. The Accumulation Phase begins with our acceptance of your first Purchase Payment and ends the Business Day before your Annuity Commencement Date. The Accumulation Phase will end sooner if you surrender your Contract or the Annuitant dies before the Annuity Commencement Date.

Issuing Your Contract

When you purchase a Contract, a completed Application and the initial Purchase Payment are sent to us for acceptance. When we accept a Group Contract, we issue the Contract to the Owner; we issue a Certificate to you as a Participant when we accept your Application. We will credit your initial Purchase Payment to your Account within 2 business days of receiving your completed Application. If your Application is not complete, we will notify you. If we do not have the necessary information to complete the Application within 5 business days, we will send your money back to you or ask your permission to retain your Purchase Payment until the Application is made complete. Then we will apply the Purchase Payment within 2 business days of when the Application is complete.

Amount and Frequency of Purchase Payments

The amount of Purchase Payments may vary; however, we will not accept an initial Purchase Payment of less than $5,000 ($10,000 if you live in California, Maryland or Texas), and each additional Purchase Payment must be at least $1,000, unless we waive these limits. In addition, we will not accept a Purchase Payment if your Account Value is over $1 million, or if the Purchase Payment would cause your Account Value to exceed $1 million, unless we have approved the Payment in advance. Within these limits, you may make Purchase Payments at any time during the Accumulation Phase.

Allocation of Net Purchase Payments

You may allocate your Purchase Payments among the different Sub-Accounts and Guarantee Periods we offer. Over the life of your Contract, you may allocate amounts among as many as 18 of the available investment options.

In your Application, you may specify the percentage of each Purchase Payment to be allocated to each Sub-Account or Guarantee Period. These percentages are called your allocation factors. Your allocation factors will remain in effect as long as your selected Sub-Accounts and Guarantee Periods continue to be available for investment. You may, however, change the allocation factors for future Payments by sending us notice of the change in a form acceptable to us. We will use your new allocation factors for the first Purchase Payment we receive with or after we have received notice of the change, and for all future Purchase Payments, until we receive another change notice.

Although it is currently not our practice, we may deduct applicable premium taxes or similar taxes from your Purchase Payments (see ''Contract Charges - Premium Taxes''). In that case, we will credit your Net Purchase Payment, which is the Purchase Payment minus the amount of those taxes.

Your Account

When we accept your first Purchase Payment, we establish an Account for you, which we maintain throughout the Accumulation Phase of your Contract.

Your Account Value

Your Account Value is the sum of the value of the 2 components of your Contract: the Variable Account portion of your Contract (''Variable Account Value'') and the Fixed Account portion of your Contract (''Fixed Account Value''). These 2 components are calculated separately, as described below under the headings ''Variable Account Value'' and ''Fixed Account Value.''

Variable Account Value

     Variable Accumulation Units

In order to calculate your Variable Account Value, we use a measure called a Variable Accumulation Unit for each Sub-Account. Your Variable Account Value is the sum of your Account Value in each Sub-Account, which is the number of your Variable Accumulation Units for that Sub-Account times the value of each Unit.

     Variable Accumulation Unit Value

The value of each Variable Accumulation Unit in a Sub-Account reflects the net investment performance of that Sub-Account. We determine that value once on each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading, at the close of trading, which is currently 4:00 p.m., Eastern Time. (The close of trading is determined by the New York Stock Exchange.) We also may determine the value of Variable Accumulation Units of a Sub-Account on days the Exchange is closed if there is enough trading in securities held by that Sub-Account to materially affect the value of the Variable Accumulation Units. Each day we make a valuation is called a ''Business Day.'' The period that begins at the time Variable Accumulation Units are valued on a Business Day and ends at that time on the next Business Day is called a Valuation Period. On days other than Business Days, the value of a Variable Accumulation Unit does not change.

To measure these values, we use a factor - which we call the Net Investment Factor- which represents the net return on the Sub-Account's assets. At the end of any Valuation Period, the value of a Variable Accumulation Unit for a Sub-Account is equal to the value of that Sub-Account's Variable Accumulation Units at the end of the previous Valuation Period, multiplied by the Net Investment Factor. We calculate the Net Investment Factor by dividing (1) the net asset value of a Series share held in the Sub-Account at the end of that Valuation Period, plus the per share amount of any dividend or capital gains distribution made by that Series during the Valuation Period, by (2) the net asset value per share of the Series share at the end of the previous Valuation Period; we then deduct a factor representing the mortality and expense risk charge and administrative expense charge for each day in the Valuation Period. See ''Contract Charges.''

For a hypothetical example of how we calculate the value of a Variable Accumulation Unit, see the Statement of Additional Information.

     Crediting and Canceling Variable Accumulation Units

When we receive an allocation to a Sub-Account, either from a Net Purchase Payment or a transfer of Account Value, we credit that amount to your Account in Variable Accumulation Units. Similarly, we cancel Variable Accumulation Units when you transfer or withdraw amounts from a Sub-Account, or when we deduct certain charges under the Contract. We determine the number of Units credited or canceled by dividing the dollar amount by the Variable Accumulation Unit value for that Sub-Account at the end of the Valuation Period during which the transaction or charge is effective.

Fixed Account Value

Your Fixed Account value is the sum of all amounts allocated to Guarantee Periods, either from Net Purchase Payments, transfers or renewals, plus interest credited on those amounts, and minus withdrawals, transfers out of Guarantee Periods, and any deductions for charges under the Contract taken from your Fixed Account Value.

     Crediting Interest

We credit interest on amounts allocated to a Guarantee Period at the applicable Guaranteed Interest Rate for the duration of the Guarantee Period. The Guarantee Period begins the day we apply your allocation and ends when the number of calendar years (or months if the Guarantee Period is less than one year) in the Guarantee Period (measured from the end of the calendar month in which the amount was allocated to the Guarantee Period) have elapsed. The last day of the Guarantee Period is its Expiration Date. During the Guarantee Period, we credit interest daily at a rate that yields the Guaranteed Interest Rate on an annual effective basis.

     Guarantee Amounts

Each separate allocation you make to a Guarantee Period, together with interest credited thereon, is called a Guarantee Amount. Each Guarantee Amount is treated separately for purposes of determining the Market Value Adjustment. We may restrict a Guarantee Period that will extend beyond your Maximum Annuity Commencement Date. Renewals into a Guarantee Period that will extend beyond your maximum Annuity Commencement Date will result in the application of a Market Value Adjustment upon annuitization or withdrawal. Each new allocation to a Guarantee Period must be at least $1,000.

     Renewals

We will notify you in writing between 45 and 75 days before the Renewal Date for any Guarantee Amount. If you would like to change your Fixed Account option, we must receive from you prior to the Renewal Date:

1)

written notice electing a different Guarantee Period from among those we then offer, or

 

 

2)

written instructions to transfer the Guarantee Amount to one or more Sub-Accounts, in accordance with the transfer privilege provisions of the Contract (see "Transfer Privilege.")

If we receive no instructions from you prior to the Renewal Date, we will automatically renew your Fixed Account allocation into a new Guarantee Period of the same duration as the last Guarantee Period. If we are no longer offering a Guarantee Period of the same duration, we will automatically transfer your Fixed Account allocation into the Money Market Sub-Account.

A Guarantee Amount will not renew into a Guarantee Period that will extend beyond your Maximum Annuity Commencement Date. In that case, unless you notify us otherwise, we will automatically renew your Guarantee Amount into the Money Market Sub-Account.

     Early Withdrawals

If you withdraw, transfer, or annuitize an allocation to a Guarantee Period more than 30 days prior to the Expiration Date, we will apply a Market Value Adjustment to the transaction. This could result in an increase or decrease of your Account Value, depending on interest rates at the time. You bear the risk that you will receive less than your principal if the Market Value Adjustment applies.

Transfer Privilege

     Permitted Transfers

During the Accumulation Phase, you may transfer all or part of your Account Value to one or more Sub-Accounts or Guarantee Periods then available, subject to the following restrictions:

o

You may not make more than 12 transfers in any Account Year;

o

The amount transferred from a Sub-Account must be at least $1,000 unless you are transferring your entire balance in that Sub-Account;

o

Your Account Value remaining in a Sub-Account must be at least $1,000;

o

The amount transferred from a Guarantee Period must be the entire Guarantee Amount, except for transfers of interest credited during the current Account Year;

o

At least 30 days must elapse between transfers to or from Guarantee Periods;

o

Transfers to or from Sub-Accounts are subject to terms and conditions that may be imposed by the Series Fund;

o

The total number of Sub-Accounts and Guarantee Periods within an Account may not exceed 18 over the lifetime of the Contract; and

o

We impose additional restrictions on market timers, which are further described below.

These restrictions do not apply to transfers made under any approved Optional Program. At our discretion, we may waive some or all of these restrictions.

There is usually no charge imposed on transfers; however, we reserve the right to impose a transfer charge of $15 for each transfer. Transfers out of a Guarantee Period occurring more than 30 days before the Renewal Date or any time after the Expiration Date or any time after the Expiration Date will be subject to the Market Value Adjustment described below. Under current law there is no tax liability for transfers.

Requests for Transfers

You may request transfers in writing or by telephone. If the request is by telephone, it must be made before the earlier of (a) 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on a Business Day, or (b) the close of the New York Stock Exchange on days that the Stock Exchange closes before 4:00 p.m. Otherwise, your transfer request will be effective on the next Business Day. The telephone transfer privilege is available automatically, and does not require your written election. We will require personal identifying information to process a request for transfer made by telephone. We will not be liable for following instructions communicated by telephone that we reasonably believe are genuine.

Your transfer request will be effective as of the close of the Business Day if we receive your transfer request before the earlier of (a) 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on a Business Day, or (b) the close of the New York Stock Exchange on days that the Stock Exchange closes before 4:00 p.m. Otherwise, your transfer request will be effective on the next Business Day.

Market Timers

The Contracts are not designed for professional market timing organizations or other entities using programmed and frequent transfers. If you wish to employ such strategies, you should not purchase a Contract. Accordingly, transfers may be subject to restrictions if exercised by a market timing firm or any other third party authorized to initiate transfer transactions on behalf of multiple Participants. In imposing such restrictions, we may, among other things, not accept (1) the transfer instructions of any agent acting under a power of attorney on behalf of more than one Participant, or (2) the transfer instructions of individual Participants who have executed preauthorized transfer forms that are submitted at the same time by market timing firms or other third parties on behalf of more than one Participant. We will not impose these restrictions unless our actions are reasonably intended to prevent the use of such transfers in a manner that will disadvantage or potentially impair the Contract rights of other Participants.

In addition, the Series Fund has reserved the right to temporarily or permanently refuse exchange requests from the Variable Account if, in MFS' judgment, a Series would be unable to invest effectively in accordance with its investment objective and policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely affected. In particular, a pattern of exchanges that coincide with a market timing strategy may be disruptive to a Series and therefore may be refused. Accordingly, the Variable Account may not be in a position to effectuate transfers and may refuse transfer requests without prior notice. We also reserve the right, for similar reasons, to refuse or delay exchange requests involving transfers to or from the Fixed Account.

Waivers; Reduced Charges; Credits; Bonus Guaranteed Interest Rates

We may reduce or waive the withdrawal charge or annual Account Fee, credit additional amounts, or grant bonus Guaranteed Interest Rates in certain situations. These situations may include sales of Contracts (1) where selling and/or maintenance costs associated with the Contracts are reduced, such as the sale of several Contracts to the same Participant, sales of large Contracts, and certain group sales, and (2) to officers, directors and employees of the Company or its affiliates, registered representatives and employees of broker-dealers with a current selling agreement with the Company and affiliates of such representatives and broker-dealers, employees of affiliated asset management firms, and persons who have retired from such positions (''Eligible Employees'') and immediate family members of Eligible Employees. Eligible Employees and their immediate family members may also purchase a Contract without regard to minimum Purchase Payment requirements. For other situations in which withdrawal charges may be waived, see ''Withdrawals, Withdrawal Charge and Market Value Adjustment.''

Optional Programs

     Dollar-Cost Averaging

Dollar-cost averaging allows you to invest gradually, over time, in up to 12 Sub-Accounts. You may select a dollar-cost averaging program at no extra charge by allocating a minimum of $1,000 to a designated Sub-Account or to a Guarantee Period we make available in connection with the program. Amounts allocated to the Fixed Account under the program will earn interest at a rate declared by the Company for the Guarantee Period you select. Previously applied amounts may not be transferred to a Guarantee Period made available in connection with this program. Each month or quarter, as you select, we will transfer the same amount automatically to one or more Sub-Accounts that you choose, up to a maximum of 12 Sub-Accounts. The program continues until your Account Value allocated to the program is depleted or you elect to stop the program. The final amount transferred from the Fixed Account will include all interest earned.

No Market Value Adjustment (either positive or negative) will apply to amounts automatically transferred from the Fixed Account under the dollar-cost averaging program, except that if you discontinue or alter the program prior to completion, amounts remaining in the Fixed Account will be transferred to the Money Market Sub-Account, unless you instruct us otherwise, and the Market Value Adjustment will be applied. Any new allocation of a Purchase Payment to the program will be treated as commencing a new dollar-cost averaging program and is subject to the $1,000 minimum.

The main objective of a dollar cost averaging program is to minimize the impact of short-term price fluctuations on Account Value. Since you transfer the same dollar amount to the Sub-Accounts at set intervals, dollar cost averaging allows you to purchase more Variable Accumulation Units (and, indirectly, more Series Fund shares) when prices are low and fewer Variable Accumulation Units (and, indirectly, fewer Series Fund shares) when prices are high. Therefore, you may achieve a lower average cost per Variable Accumulation Unit over the long term. A dollar-cost averaging program allows you to take advantage of market fluctuations. However, it is important to understand that a dollar-cost averaging program does not assure a profit or protect against loss in a declining market.

     Asset Allocation

One or more asset allocation programs may be available in connection with the Contracts, at no extra charge. Asset allocation is the process of investing in different asset classes - such as equity funds, fixed income funds, and money market funds - depending on your personal investment goals, tolerance for risk, and investment time horizon. By spreading your money among a variety of asset classes, you may be able to reduce the risk and volatility of investing, although there are no guarantees, and asset allocation does not insure a profit or protect against loss in a declining market.

Currently, you may select one of the available asset allocation models, each of which represents a combination of Sub-Accounts with a different level of risk. These models, as well as the terms and conditions of the asset allocation program, are fully described in a separate brochure. We may add or delete programs in the future.

If you elect an asset allocation program, we will automatically allocate your Purchase Payments among the Sub-Accounts represented in the model you choose. By electing an asset allocation program, you thereby authorize us to automatically reallocate your investment options, as determined by the terms of the asset allocation program, to reflect the current composition of the model you have selected, without further instruction, until we receive notification that you wish to terminate the program, or choose a different model.

     Systematic Withdrawal and Interest Out Programs

If you have an Account Value of $10,000 or more, you may select our Systematic Withdrawal Program or our Interest Out Program.

Under the Systematic Withdrawal Program, you determine the amount and frequency of regular withdrawals you would like to receive from your Fixed Account Value and/or Variable Account Value and we will effect them automatically; a Market Value Adjustment may be applicable upon withdrawal. Under the Interest Out Program, we automatically pay to you, or reinvest, interest credited for all Guarantee Periods you have chosen. Withdrawals under these programs are subject to surrender charges. They may also be included as income and subject to a 10% federal tax penalty. You should consult your tax adviser before choosing these options.

You may change or stop either program at any time, by written notice to us.

     Portfolio Rebalancing Program

Under the Portfolio Rebalancing Program, we transfer funds among the Sub-Accounts to maintain the percentage allocation you have selected among these Sub-Accounts. At your election, we will make these transfers on a quarterly, semi-annual or annual basis.

Portfolio Rebalancing does not permit transfers to or from any Guarantee Period.

     Secured Futures Program

Under this program, we divide your Purchase Payment between the Fixed Account and the Variable Account. For the Fixed Account portion, you choose a Guarantee Period from among those we offer, and we allocate to that Guarantee Period the portion of your Purchase Payment necessary so that at the end of the Guarantee Period, your Fixed Account allocation, including interest, will equal the entire amount of your original Purchase Payment. The remainder of the original Purchase Payment will be invested in Sub-Accounts of your choice. At the end of the Guarantee Period, you will be guaranteed the amount of your Purchase Payment (assuming no withdrawals), plus you will have the benefit, if any, of the investment performance of the Sub-Accounts you have chosen.

WITHDRAWALS, WITHDRAWAL CHARGE AND MARKET VALUE ADJUSTMENT

Cash Withdrawals

     Requesting a Withdrawal

At any time during the Accumulation Phase you may withdraw in cash all or any portion of your Account Value. To make a withdrawal, you must send us a written request at our Annuity Mailing Address. Your request must specify whether you want to withdraw the entire amount of your Account or, if less, the amount you wish to receive.

All withdrawals may be subject to a withdrawal charge (see ''Withdrawal Charge'' below) and withdrawals from your Fixed Account Value also may be subject to a Market Value Adjustment (see ''Market Value Adjustment'' below). Upon request we will notify you of the amount we would pay in the event of a full or partial withdrawal. Withdrawals also may have adverse federal income tax consequences, including a 10% penalty tax. (see ''Tax Considerations.'') You should carefully consider these tax consequences before requesting a cash withdrawal.

     Full Withdrawals

If you request a full withdrawal, we calculate the amount we will pay you as follows: We start with the total value of your Account at the end of the Valuation Period during which we receive your withdrawal request; we deduct the Account Fee for the Account Year in which the withdrawal is made; we add or subtract the amount of any Market Value Adjustment applicable to your Fixed Account Value; and finally, we deduct any applicable withdrawal charge.

A full withdrawal results in the surrender of your Contract, and cancellation of all rights and privileges under your Contract.

     Partial Withdrawals

If you request a partial withdrawal we will pay you the actual amount specified in your request and then reduce the value of your Account by deducting the amount paid, adding or deducting any Market Value Adjustment applicable to amounts withdrawn from the Fixed Account, and deducting any applicable withdrawal charge.

You may specify the amount you want withdrawn from each Sub-Account and/or Guarantee Period to which your Account is allocated. If you do not so specify, we will deduct the total amount you request pro rata, based on your Account Value at the end of the Valuation Period during which we receive your request.

If you request a partial withdrawal that would result in your Account Value being reduced to an amount less than the Account Fee for the Account Year in which you make the withdrawal, we will treat it as a request for a full withdrawal.

     Time of Payment

We will pay you the applicable amount of any full or partial withdrawal within 7 days after we receive your withdrawal request, except in cases where we are permitted to defer payment under the Investment Company Act of 1940 and applicable state insurance law. Currently, we may defer payment of amounts you withdraw from the Variable Account only for the following periods:

o

When the New York Stock Exchange is closed (except weekends and holidays) or when trading on the New York Stock Exchange is restricted;

o

When it is not reasonably practical to dispose of securities held by the Series Fund or to determine the value of the net assets of the Series Fund, because an emergency exists; and

o

When an SEC order permits us to defer payment for the protection of Participants.

We also may defer payment of amounts you withdraw from the Fixed Account for up to 6 months from the date we receive your withdrawal request. We do not pay interest on the amount of any payments we defer.

     Withdrawal Restrictions for Qualified Plans

If your Contract is a Qualified Contract, you should carefully check the terms of your retirement plan for limitations and restrictions on cash withdrawals.

Special restrictions apply to withdrawals from Contracts used for Section 403(b) annuities. See ''Tax Considerations - Tax-Sheltered Annuities.''

When you make a withdrawal, we consider the oldest Purchase Payment that you have not already withdrawn to be withdrawn first, then the second oldest Purchase Payment, and so forth. Once all Purchase Payments are withdrawn, the balance withdrawn is considered to be accumulated value.

Withdrawal Charge

We do not deduct any sales charge from your Purchase Payments when they are made. However, we may impose a withdrawal charge (known as a ''contingent deferred sales charge'') on certain amounts you withdraw. We impose this charge to defray some of our expenses related to the sale of the Contracts, such as commissions we pay to agents, the cost of sales literature, and other promotional costs and transaction expenses.

If you purchased your Contract before November 1994, or if your state does not permit our current withdrawal charge, we use the Alternate Withdrawal Charge, described below.

The withdrawal charge will never be greater than 6% of the aggregate amount of Purchase Payments you make under the Contract.

We may modify the withdrawal charges and limits, upon notice to the Owner of the Group Contract. However, any modification will only apply to Accounts established after the date of the modification.

     Free Withdrawal Amount

In each Account Year you may withdraw a portion of your Account Value - which we will call the ''free withdrawal amount'' - before incurring the withdrawal charge. For any year, the free withdrawal amount is equal to (1) 10% of the amount of all Purchase Payments you have made during the last 7 Account Years, including the current Account Year (the ''Annual Withdrawal Allowance''), plus (2) the amount of all Purchase Payments made before the last 7 Account Years that you have not previously withdrawn. Any portion of the Annual Withdrawal Allowance that you do not use in an Account Year is cumulative, that is, it is carried forward and available for use in future years.

For convenience, we refer to Purchase Payments made during the last 7 Account Years (including the current Account Year) as ''New Payments,'' and all Purchase Payments made before the last 7 Account Years as ''Old Payments.''

For example, assume you wish to make a withdrawal from your Contract in Account Year 10. You made an initial Purchase Payment of $10,000 in Account Year 1, you made one additional Purchase Payment of $8,000 in Account Year 8, and you have made no previous withdrawals. Your Account Value in Account Year 10 is $35,000. The free withdrawal amount for Account Year 10 is $19,400, calculated as follows:

o

$800, which is the Annual Withdrawal Allowance for Account Year 10 (10% of the $8,000 Purchase Payment made in Account Year 8, the only New Payment); plus

o

$8,600, which is the total of the unused Annual Withdrawal Allowances of $1,000 for each of Account Years 1 through 7 and $800 for each of Account Years 8 and 9 that are carried forward and available for use in Account Year 10; plus

o

$10,000, which is the amount of all Old Payments that you have not previously withdrawn.

     Withdrawal Charge on Purchase Payments

If you withdraw more than the free withdrawal amount in any Account Year, we consider the excess amount to be withdrawn first from New Payments that you have not previously withdrawn. We impose the withdrawal charge on the amount of these New Payments. Thus, the maximum amount on which we will impose the withdrawal charge in any year will never be more than the total of all New Payments that you have not previously withdrawn.

The amount of your withdrawal, if any, that exceeds the total of the free withdrawal amount plus the aggregate amount of all New Payments not previously withdrawn, is not subject to the withdrawal charge.

     Order of Withdrawal

New Payments are withdrawn on a first-in first-out basis until all New Payments have been withdrawn. For example, assume the same facts as in the example above. In Account Year 10 you wish to withdraw $25,000. We attribute the withdrawal first to the free withdrawal amount of $19,400, which is not subject to the withdrawal charge. The remaining $5,600 is withdrawn from the Purchase Payment made in Account Year 8 (the only New Payment) and is subject to the withdrawal charge. The $2,400 balance of the Account Year 8 Purchase Payment will remain in your Account. If you make a subsequent $5,000 withdrawal in Account Year 10, $2,400 of that amount will be withdrawn from the remainder of the Account Year 8 Purchase Payment and will be subject to the withdrawal charge. The other $2,600 of your withdrawal (which exceeds the amount of all New Payments not previously withdrawn) will not be subject to the withdrawal charge.

     Calculation of Withdrawal Charge

We calculate the amount of the withdrawal charge by multiplying the Purchase Payments you withdraw by a percentage. The percentage varies according to the number of Account Years the Purchase Payment has been held in your Account, including the year in which you made the Payment, but not the year in which you withdraw it. Each payment begins a new seven-year period and moves down a declining surrender charge scale at each Account Anniversary. Payments received during the current Account Year will be charged 6% if withdrawn. On your next scheduled Account Anniversary, that payment along with any other payments made during that Account Year, will be considered to be in their second Account Year and will have a 5% withdrawal charge. On the next Account Anniversary, these payments will move into their third Account Year and will have a withdrawal charge of 5%, if withdrawn. The withdrawal charge decreases according to the number of Account Years the purchase payment has been in your Account. The declining scale is as follows:

Number of Account Years Purchase Payment has been in your Account

 

Withdrawal Charge

0-1

 

6%

2-3

 

5%

4-5

 

4%

6

 

3%

7 or more

 

0%

For example, using the same facts as in the example in ''Free Withdrawal Amount'' above, the percentage applicable to the withdrawals in Account Year 10 of Purchase Payments made in Account Year 8 would be 5%, because the number of Account Years the Purchase Payments have been held in your Account would be 2.

For additional examples of how we calculate withdrawal charges, see Appendix C.

Alternate Withdrawal Charge

If you purchased your Contract before November 1994, or if your state does not permit the withdrawal charge described above, we will impose the withdrawal charge as follows:

     Free Withdrawal Amount

In each Account Year you may withdraw a portion of your Account Value, which we will call the ''free withdrawal amount,'' before incurring the withdrawal charge. For any year, the free withdrawal amount is equal to (1) 10% of the amount of all Purchase Payments you have made during the last 7 Account Years, including the current Account Year (the ''Annual Withdrawal Allowance''), plus (2) the amount of all Purchase Payments made before the last 7 Account Years that you have not previously withdrawn. The Annual Withdrawal Allowance is not cumulative; any portion of the Annual Withdrawal Allowance that you do not use in an Account Year will not be carried forward or available for use in future years.

For convenience, we refer to Purchase Payments made during the last 7 Account Years (including the current Account Year) as ''New Payments,'' and all Purchase Payments made before the last 7 Account Years as ''Old Payments.'' Your Account Value minus New Payments and Old Payments is called ''accumulated value.''

    Order of Withdrawal

When you make a withdrawal, we consider the oldest Payment that you have not already withdrawn to be withdrawn first, then the next oldest, and so forth. Once all Old Payments and New Payments are withdrawn, the balance withdrawn is considered to be accumulated value.

     Calculation of Withdrawal Charge

We calculate the amount of the withdrawal charge by multiplying the Purchase Payments you withdraw by a percentage. The percentage varies according to the number of Account Years the Purchase Payment has been held in your Account, including the year in which you made the Payment, but not the year in which you withdraw it. Each payment begins a new seven-year period and moves down a declining surrender charge scale at each Account Anniversary. Payments received during the current Account Year will be charged 6% if withdrawn. On your next scheduled Account Anniversary, that payment along with any other payments made during that Account Year, will be considered to be in their second Account Year and will have a 5% withdrawal charge. On the next Account Anniversary, these payments will move into their third Account Year and will have a withdrawal charge of 5%, if withdrawn. The withdrawal charge decreases according to the number of Account Years the purchase payment has been in your Account. The declining scale is as follows:

Number of Account Years Purchase Payment has been in your Account

 

Withdrawal Charge

0-1

 

6%

2-3

 

5%

4-5

 

4%

6

 

3%

7 or more

 

0%

For additional examples of how we calculate the Alternate Withdrawal Charge, see Appendix C.

Types of Withdrawals Not Subject to Withdrawal Charge

We do not impose a withdrawal charge on withdrawals from the Accounts of (a) our employees, (b) employees of our affiliates, or (c) licensed insurance agents who sell the Contracts. We also may waive withdrawal charges with respect to Purchase Payments derived from the surrender of other annuity contracts we issue.

If approved in your state, we will waive the withdrawal charge for a full withdrawal if (a) at least one year has passed since we issued your Contract and (b) you are confined to an eligible nursing home and have been confined there for at least the preceding 180 days, or any shorter period required by your state. An ''eligible nursing home'' means a licensed hospital or licensed skilled or intermediate care nursing facility at which medical treatment is available on a daily basis and daily medical records are kept for each patient. You must provide us evidence of confinement in the form we determine.

We do not impose the withdrawal charge on amounts you apply to provide an annuity, amounts we pay as a death benefit, or amounts you transfer among the Sub-Accounts, between the Sub-Accounts and the Fixed Account, or within the Fixed Account.

Market Value Adjustment

We will apply a Market Value Adjustment if you withdraw or transfer amounts from your Fixed Account Value more than 30 days before the end of the applicable Guarantee Period. For this purpose, using Fixed Account Value to provide an annuity is considered a withdrawal, and the Market Value Adjustment will apply. However, we will not apply the Market Value Adjustment to automatic transfers to a Sub-Account from a Guarantee Period as part of our dollar cost averaging program.

We apply the Market Value Adjustment separately to each Guarantee Amount in the Fixed Account, that is to each separate allocation you have made to a Guarantee Period together with interestt credited on that allocation. However, we do not apply the adjustment to the amount of interes credited during your current Account Year. Any withdrawal from a Guarantee Amount is attributed first to such interest.

A Market Value Adjustment may decrease, increase or have no effect on your Account Value. This will depend on changes in interest rates since you made your allocation to the Guarantee Period and the length of time remaining in the Guarantee Period. In general, if the Guaranteed Interest Rate we currently declare for Guarantee Periods equal to the balance of your Guarantee Period (or your entire Guarantee Period for Guarantee Periods of less than one year) is higher than your Guaranteed Interest Rate, the Market Value Adjustment is likely to decrease your Account Value. If our current Guaranteed Interest Rate is lower, the Market Value Adjustment is likely to increase your Account Value.

We determine the amount of the Market Value Adjustment by multiplying the amount that is subject to the adjustment by the following formula:

where:

[(1 + I) / (1 + J)] ^ (N/12) -1

I is the Guaranteed Interest Rate applicable to the Guarantee Amount from which you withdraw, transfer or annuitize;

J is the Guaranteed Interest Rate we declare at the time of your withdrawal, transfer or annuitization for Guarantee Periods equal to the length of time remaining in the Guarantee Period applicable to your Guarantee Amount, rounded to the next higher number of complete years, for Guarantee Periods of one year or more. For any Guarantee Periods of less than one year, J is the Guaranteed Interest Rate we declare at the time of your withdrawal, transfer or annuitization for a Guarantee Period of the same length as your Guarantee Period. If, at that time, we do not offer the applicable Guarantee Period we will use an interest rate determined by straight-line interpolation of the Guaranteed Interest Rates for the Guarantee Periods we do offer; and

N is the number of complete months remaining in your Guarantee Period.

We will apply the Market Value Adjustment to the amount being withdrawn after deduction of any Account Fee, if applicable, but before we impose any withdrawal charge on the amount withdrawn.

For examples of how we calculate the Market Value Adjustment, see Appendix C.

CONTRACT CHARGES

Account Fee

During the Accumulation Phase of your Contract, we will deduct from your Account an annual Account Fee to help cover the administrative expenses we incur related to the issuance of Contracts and the maintenance of Accounts. We deduct the Account Fee on each Account Anniversary, which is the anniversary of the first day of the month after we issue your Contract. In Account Years 1 through 5, the Account Fee is equal to the lesser of (a) $30 and (b) 2% of your Account Value. After Account Year 5, we may change the Account Fee each year, but the Account Fee will never exceed the lesser of (a) $50 and (b) 2% of your Account Value. We deduct the Account Fee pro rata from each Sub-Account and each Guarantee Period, based on the allocation of your Account Value on your Account Anniversary.

We will not charge you the annual Account Fee if:

(1)

your Account has been allocated only to the Fixed Account during the applicable Account Year; or

(2)

your Account Value is more than $75,000 on your Account Anniversary.

If you make a full withdrawal of your Account, we will deduct the full amount of the Account Fee at the time of the withdrawal. In addition, on the Annuity Commencement Date we will deduct a pro rata portion of the Account Fee to reflect the time elapsed between the last Account Anniversary and the day before the Annuity Commencement Date.

After the Annuity Commencement Date, we will deduct an annual Account Fee of $30 in the aggregate in equal amounts from each Variable Annuity payment we make during the year. We do not deduct any Account Fee from Fixed Annuity payments.

Administrative Expense Charge

We deduct an administrative expense charge from the assets of the Variable Account at an annual effective rate equal to 0.15% during both the Accumulation Phase and the Income Phase. This charge is designed to reimburse us for expenses we incur in administering the Contracts, the Accounts and the Variable Account that are not covered by the annual Account Fee.

Mortality and Expense Risk Charge

During both the Accumulation Phase and the Income Phase, we deduct a mortality and expense risk charge from the assets of the Variable Account at an effective annual rate equal to 1.25%. The mortality risk we assume arises from our contractual obligation to continue to make annuity payments to each Annuitant, regardless of how long the Annuitant lives and regardless of how long all Annuitants as a group live. This obligation assures each Annuitant that neither the longevity of fellow Annuitants nor an improvement in life expectancy generally will have an adverse effect on the amount of any annuity payment received under the Contract. The mortality risk also arises from our contractual obligation to pay a death benefit upon the death of the Annuitant prior to the Annuity Commencement Date. The expense risk we assume is the risk that the Account Fee and the administrative expense charge we assess under the Contracts may be insufficient to cover the actual total administrative expenses we incur. If the amount of the charge is insufficient to cover the mortality and expense risks, we will bear the loss. If the amount of the charge is more than sufficient to cover the risks, we will make a profit on the charge. We may use this profit for any proper corporate purpose, including the payment of marketing and distribution expenses for the Contracts.

Premium Taxes

Some states and local jurisdictions impose a premium tax on us that is equal to a specified percentage of the Purchase Payments you make. In many states there is no premium tax. We believe that the amounts of applicable premium taxes currently range from 0% to 3.5%. You should consult a tax adviser to find out if your state imposes a premium tax and the amount of any tax.

In order to reimburse us for the premium tax we may pay on Purchase Payments, our policy is to deduct the amount of such taxes from the amount you apply to provide an annuity at the time of annuitization. However, we reserve the right to deduct the amount of any applicable tax from your Account at any time, including at the time you make a Purchase Payment or make a full or partial withdrawal. We do not make any profit on the deductions we make to reimburse premium taxes.

Series Fund Expenses

There are fees and charges deducted from each Series of the Series Fund. These fees and expenses are described in the Series Fund's prospectus and related Statement of Additional Information.

Modification in the Case of Group Contracts

We may modify the annual Account Fee, the administrative expense charge and the mortality and expense risk charge upon notice to Owners. However, such modification will apply only with respect to Participant Accounts established after the effective date of the modification.

DEATH BENEFIT

If the Annuitant dies during the Accumulation Phase, we will pay a death benefit to your Beneficiary, using the payment method elected - a single cash payment or one of our Annuity Options. (If you have named more than one Annuitant, the death benefit will be payable after the death of the last surviving of the Annuitants.) If the Beneficiary is not living on your date of death, we will pay the death benefit to the Annuitant, or, if the Annuitant is not then living, in one sum to your estate. We do not pay a death benefit if the Annuitant dies during the Income Phase. However, the Beneficiary will receive any payments provided under an Annuity Option that is in effect.

Amount of Death Benefit

To calculate the amount of your death benefit, we use a ''Death Benefit Date.'' The Death Benefit Date is the date we receive proof of the Annuitant's death in an acceptable form (''Due Proof of Death'') if you have elected a death benefit payment method before the Annuitant's death and it remains effective. Otherwise, the Death Benefit Date is the later of the date we receive Due Proof of Death or the date we receive either the Beneficiary's election of payment method, or if the Beneficiary is the Annuitant's spouse, Contract continuation. If we do not receive the Beneficiary's election within 60 days after we receive Due Proof of Death, the Death Benefit Date will be the last day of the 60 day period.

The amount of the death benefit is determined as of the Death Benefit Date.

If the Annuitant was 85 or younger on your Contract Date (the date we accepted your first Purchase Payment), the death benefit will be the greatest of the following amounts:

1.

Your Account Value for the Valuation Period during which the Death Benefit Date occurs;

2.

The amount we would pay if you had surrendered your entire Account on the Death Benefit Date;

3.

Your Account Value on the Seven-Year Anniversary immediately before the Death Benefit Date, adjusted for subsequent Purchase Payments and partial withdrawals and charges made between the Seven-Year Anniversary and the Death Benefit Date; and

4.

Your total Purchase Payments minus the sum of partial withdrawals; interest will accrue daily on each Purchase Payment and each partial withdrawal at a rate equivalent to a rate of 5% per year until the first day of the month following the Annuitant's 80th birthday, or until the Purchase Payment or partial withdrawal has doubled in amount, whichever is earlier.

If you were 86 or older on your Contract Date, the death benefit is equal to amount (2) above; because this amount will reflect any applicable withdrawal charges and Market Value Adjustment, it may be less than your Account Value.

If the death benefit we pay is amount (2), (3) or (4), your Account Value will be increased by the excess, if any, of that amount over amount (1). Any such increase will be allocated to the Sub-Accounts in proportion to your Account Value in those Sub-Accounts on the Death Benefit Date. Also, any portion of this new Account Value attributed to the Fixed Account will be transferred to the Money Market Sub-Account (without the application of a Market Value Adjustment). The Beneficiary may then transfer to the Fixed Account and begin a new Guarantee Period.

Spousal Continuance

If your spouse is your Beneficiary, upon your death (if you are the Annuitant) your spouse may elect to continue the Contract as the Participant, rather than receive the death benefit. In that case, the death benefit provisions of the Contract will not apply until the death of your spouse (see ''Other Contract Provisions - Death of Participant'').

Method of Paying Death Benefit

The death benefit may be paid in a single cash payment or as an annuity (either fixed, variable or a combination), under one or more of our Annuity Options. We describe the Annuity Options in this Prospectus under ''The Income Phase - Annuity Provisions.''

During the Accumulation Phase, you may elect the method of payment for the death benefit. If no such election is in effect on the date of the Annuitant's death, the Beneficiary may elect either a single cash payment or an annuity. If you were the Annuitant and the Beneficiary is your spouse, the Beneficiary may elect to continue the Contract. These elections are made by sending us at our Annuity Mailing Address, a completed election form, which we will provide. If we do not receive the Beneficiary's election within 60 days after we receive Due Proof of Death, we will pay the death benefit in a single cash payment.

If we pay the death benefit in the form of an Annuity Option, the Beneficiary becomes the Annuitant/Payee under the terms of that Annuity Option (see ''The Income Phase - Annuity Provisions''). Neither you nor the Beneficiary may exercise rights that would adversely affect the treatment of the Contract as an annuity contract under the Internal Revenue Code (see ''Other Contract Provisions - Death of Participant.'')

Selection and Change of Beneficiary

You select your Beneficiary in your Application. You may change your Beneficiary at any time by sending us written notice on our required form, unless you previously made an irrevocable Beneficiary designation. A new Beneficiary designation is not effective until we record the change.

Payment of Death Benefit

Payment of the death benefit in cash will be made within 7 days of the Death Benefit Date, except if we are permitted to defer payment in accordance with the Investment Company Act of 1940. If an Annuity Option is elected, the Annuity Commencement Date will be the first day of the second calendar month following the Death Benefit Date, and your Account will remain in effect until the Annuity Commencement Date.

Due Proof of Death

We accept any of the following as proof of any person's death:

 

An original certified copy of an official death certificate;

 

An original certified copy of a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction as to the finding of death; or

 

Any other proof we find satisfactory.

THE INCOME PHASE - ANNUITY PROVISIONS

During the Income Phase, we make regular monthly payments to the Annuitant. The Income Phase of your Contract begins with the Annuity Commencement Date. On that date, we apply your Account Value, adjusted as described below, under the Annuity Option(s) you have selected, and we make the first annuity payment.

Once the Income Phase begins, no lump sum settlement option or cash withdrawals are permitted, except pursuant to Annuity Option D, Monthly Payments for a Specified Period Certain, as described below under the heading ''Annuity Options,'' and you cannot change the Annuity Option(s) selected. You may request a full withdrawal before the Annuity Commencement Date, which will be subject to all charges applicable on withdrawals (see ''Withdrawals, Withdrawal Charge and Market Value Adjustment'').

Selection of the Annuitant or Co-Annuitant

You select the Annuitant in your Application. The Annuitant is the person who receives annuity payments during the Income Phase and on whose life these payments are based. In your Contract, the Annuity Option(s) refer to the Annuitant as the ''Payee.''

Under a Non-Qualified Contract, if you name someone other than yourself as Annuitant, you may also select a Co-Annuitant, who will become the new Annuitant if the original Annuitant dies before the Income Phase. If you have named both an Annuitant and a Co-Annuitant, you may designate one of them to become the sole Annuitant as of the Annuity Commencement Date, if both are living at that time. If you have not made that designation on the 30th day before the Annuity Commencement Date, and both the Annuitant and the Co-Annuitant are still living, the Co-Annuitant will become the Annuitant on the Annuity Commencement Date.

When an Annuity Option has been selected as the method of paying the death benefit, the Beneficiary is the Payee of the annuity payment.

Selection of the Annuity Commencement Date

You select the Annuity Commencement Date in your Application. The following restrictions apply to the date

you may select:

o

The earliest possible Annuity Commencement Date is the first day of the second month

 

following your Contract Date.

o

The latest possible Annuity Commencement Date is the first day of the month following the

 

Annuitant's 90th birthday or, if there is a Co-Annuitant, the 90th birthday of the younger of

 

the Annuitant and Co-Annuitant.

o

The Annuity Commencement Date must always be the first day of a month.

You may change the Annuity Commencement Date from time to time by sending us written notice, with the following additional limitations:

o

We must receive your notice at least 30 days before the current Annuity Commencement Date.

 

 

o

The new Annuity Commencement Date must be at least 30 days after we receive the notice.

There may be other restrictions on your selection of the Annuity Commencement Date imposed by your retirement plan or applicable law. In most situations, current law requires that for a Qualified Contract, certain minimum distributions must commence no later than April 1 following the year the Annuitant reaches age 70 1/2 (or, for Qualified Contracts other than IRAs, no later than April 1 following the year the Annuitant retires, if later than the year the Annuitant reaches age 70 1/2).

Annuity Options

We offer the following Annuity Options for payments during the Income Phase. Each Annuity Option may be selected for a Variable Annuity, a Fixed Annuity, or a combination of both, except that Option E is available only for a Fixed Annuity. We may also agree to other settlement options, at our discretion.

     Annuity Option A - Life Annuity

We provide monthly payments during the lifetime of the Annuitant. Annuity payments stop when the Annuitant dies. There is no provision for continuation of any payments to a Beneficiary.

     Annuity Option B - Life Annuity With 60, 120, 180 or 240 Monthly Payments Certain

We make monthly payments during the lifetime of the Annuitant. In addition, we guarantee that the Beneficiary will receive monthly payments for the remainder of the period certain, if the Annuitant dies during that period. The election of a longer period results in smaller monthly payments. If no Beneficiary is designated, we pay the discounted value of the remaining payments in one sum to the Annuitant's estate. The Beneficiary may also elect to receive the discounted value of the remaining payments in one sum. The discount rate for a Variable Annuity will be the assumed interest rate in effect; the discount rate for a Fixed Annuity will be based on the interest rate we used to determine the amount of each payment.

     Annuity Option C - Joint and Survivor Annuity

We make monthly payments during the lifetime of the Annuitant and another person you designate and during the lifetime of the survivor of the two. We stop making payments when the survivor dies. There is no provision for continuance of any payments to a Beneficiary.

     Annuity Option D - Monthly Payments for a Specified Period Certain

We make monthly payments for a specified period of time from 5 to 30 years, as you elect. If payments under this option are paid on a Variable Annuity basis, the Annuitant may elect to receive some or all of the discounted value of the remaining payments, less any applicable withdrawal charge; the discount rate for this purpose will be the assumed interest rate in effect. If the Annuitant dies during the period selected, the remaining income payments are made as described under Annuity Option B. The election of this Annuity Option may result in the imposition of a penalty tax.

     Annuity Option E - Fixed Payments

We hold the portion of your Adjusted Account Value selected for this option at interest, and make fixed payments in such amounts and at such times as you and we may agree. We continue making payments until the amount we hold is exhausted. The final payment will be for the remaining balance and may be less than the previous installments. We will credit interest yearly on the amount remaining unpaid at a rate we determine from time to time, but never less than 3% per year (or a higher rate if specified in your Contract) compounded annually. We may change the rate at any time, but will not reduce it more frequently than once each calendar year. The election of this Annuity Option may result in the imposition of a penalty tax.

Selection of Annuity Option

You select one or more of the Annuity Options, which you may change from time to time during he Accumulation Phase, as long as we receive your selection or change in writing at least 30 days before the Annuity Commencement Date. If we have not received your written selection on the 30th say before the Annuity Commencement Date, you will receive Annuity Option B, for a life annuity with 120 monthly payments certain.

You may specify the proportion of your Adjusted Account Value you wish to provide a Variable Annuity or a Fixed Annuity. Under a Variable Annuity, the dollar amount of payments will vary, while under a Fixed Annuity, the dollar amount of annuity payments will remain the same. If you do not specify a Variable Annuity or a Fixed Annuity, your Adjusted Account Value will be divided between Variable Annuities and Fixed Annuities in the same proportions as your Account Value was divided between the Variable and Fixed Accounts on the Annuity Commencement Date. You may allocate your Adjusted Account Value applied to a Variable Annuity among the Sub-Accounts, or we will use your existing allocations.

There may be additional limitations on the options you may elect under your particular retirement plan or applicable law.

Remember that the Annuity Options may not be changed once annuity payments begin.

Amount of Annuity Payments

Adjusted Account Value

The Adjusted Account Value is the amount we apply to provide a Variable Annuity and/or a Fixed Annuity. We calculate Adjusted Account Value by taking your Account Value on the Business Day immediately prior to the Annuity Commencement Date and making the following adjustments:

o

We deduct a proportional amount of the annual Account Fee, based on the fraction of the current Account Year that has elapsed.

o

If applicable, we apply the Market Value Adjustment to your Account Value in the Fixed Account, which may result in a deduction, an addition, or no change to your Account Value.

o

We deduct any applicable premium tax or similar tax if not previously deducted.

     Variable Annuity Payments

Variable Annuity payments may vary each month. We determine the dollar amount of the first payment using the portion of your Adjusted Account Value applied to a Variable Annuity and the Annuity Payment Rates in your Contract, which are based on an assumed interest rate of 3% per year, compounded annually. See ''Annuity Payment Rates.''

To calculate the remaining payments, we convert the amount of the first payment into Annuity Units for each Sub-Account; we determine the number of those Annuity Units by dividing the portion of the first payment attributable to the Sub-Account by the Annuity Unit Value of that Sub-Account for the Valuation Period ending just before the Annuity Commencement Date. This number of Annuity Units for each Sub-Account will remain constant (unless the Annuitant requests an exchange of Annuity Units). However, the dollar amount of the next Variable Annuity payment - which is the sum of the number of Annuity Units for each Sub-Account times its Annuity Unit Value for the Valuation Period ending just before the date of the payment - will increase, decrease, or remain the same, depending on the net investment return of the Sub-Accounts.

If the net investment return of the Sub-Accounts selected is the same as the assumed interest rate of 3%, compounded annually, the payments will remain level. If the net investment return exceeds the assumed interest rate, payments will increase and, conversely, if it is less than the assumed interest rate, payments will decrease.

Please refer to the Statement of Additional Information for more information about calculating Variable Annuity Units and Variable Annuity payments, including examples of these calculations.

     Fixed Annuity Payments

Fixed Annuity payments are the same each month. We determine the dollar amount of each Fixed Annuity payment using the fixed portion of your Adjusted Account Value and the applicable Annuity Payment Rates. These will be either (1) the rates in your Contract, which are based on a minimum guaranteed interest rate of 3% per year, compounded annually, or (2) new rates we have published and are using on the Annuity Commencement Date, if they are more favorable (see ''Annuity Payment Rates'').

     Minimum Payments

If your Adjusted Account Value is less than $2,000, or the first annuity payment for any Annuity Option is less than $20, we will pay the Adjusted Account Value to the Annuitant in one payment.

Exchange of Variable Annuity Units

During the Income Phase, the Annuitant may exchange Annuity Units from one Sub-Account to another, up to 12 times each Account Year. To make an exchange, the Annuitant sends us, at our Annuity Mailing Address, a written request stating the number of Annuity Units in the Sub-Account he or she wishes to exchange and the new Sub-Account for which Annuity Units are requested. The number of new Annuity Units will be calculated so the dollar amount of an annuity payment on the date of the exchange would not be affected. To calculate this number, we use Annuity Unit values for the Valuation Period during which we receive the exchange request.

Before exchanging Annuity Units from one Sub-Account to another, the Annuitant should carefully review the Series Fund prospectus for the investment objectives and risk disclosure of the Series in which the Sub-Accounts invest.

During the Income Phase, we permit only exchanges among Sub-Accounts. No exchanges to or from a Fixed Annuity are permitted.

Account Fee

During the Income Phase, we deduct the annual Account Fee in equal amounts from each Variable Annuity payment. We do not deduct the annual Account Fee from Fixed Annuity payments (see ''Contract Charges - Account Fee'').

Annuity Payment Rates

The Contract contains Annuity Payment Rates for each Annuity Option described in this Prospectus. The rates show, for each $1,000 applied, the dollar amount of: (a) the first monthly Variable Annuity payment based on the assumed interest rate specified in the applicable Contract (at least 3% per year, compounded annually); and (b) the monthly Fixed Annuity payment, when this payment is based on the minimum guaranteed interest rate specified in the Contract (at least 3% per year, compounded annually). We may change these rates under Group Contracts for Accounts established after the effective date of such change (see ''Other Contract Provisions - Modification'').

The Annuity Payment Rates may vary according to the Annuity Option(s) elected and the adjusted age of the Annuitant. The Contract also describes the method of determining the adjusted age of the Annuitant. The mortality table used in determining the Annuity Payment Rates for Options A, B and C is the 1983 Individual Annuitant Mortality Table.

Annuity Options as Method of Payment for Death Benefit

You or your Beneficiary may also select one or more Annuity Options to be used in the event of the Annuitant's death before the Income Phase, as described under the ''Death Benefit'' section of this Prospectus. In that case, your Beneficiary will be the Annuitant/Payee. The Annuity Commencement Date will be the first day of the second month beginning after the Death Benefit Date.

OTHER CONTRACT PROVISIONS

Exercise of Contract Rights

A Group Contract belongs to the Owner. In the case of a Group Contract, the Owner may expressly reserve all Contract rights and privileges; otherwise, each Participant will be entitled to exercise such rights and privileges. In any case, such rights and privileges can be exercised without the consent of the Beneficiary (other than an irrevocably designated Beneficiary) or any other person. Such rights and privileges may be exercised only during the lifetime of the Annuitant before the Annuity Commencement Date, except as the Contract otherwise provides.

The Annuitant becomes the Payee on and after the Annuity Commencement Date. The Beneficiary becomes the Payee on the death of the Annuitant. Such Payee may thereafter exercise such rights and privileges, if any, of ownership which continue.

Change of Ownership

Ownership of a Qualified Contract may not be transferred except to: (1) the Annuitant; (2) a trustee or successor trustee of a pension or profit sharing trust which is qualified under Section 401 of the Internal Revenue Code; (3) the employer of the Annuitant, provided that the Qualified Contract after transfer is maintained under the terms of a retirement plan qualified under Section 403(a) of the Internal Revenue Code for the benefit of the Annuitant; (4) the trustee or custodian of an individual retirement account plan qualified under Section 408 of the Internal Revenue Code for the benefit of the Participants under a Group Contract; or (5) as otherwise permitted from time to time by laws and regulations governing the retirement or deferred compensation plans for which a Qualified Contract may be issued. Subject to the foregoing, a Qualified Contract may not be sold, assigned, transferred, discounted or pledged as collateral for a loan or as security for the performance of an obligation or for any other purpose to any person other than the Company.

The Owner of a Non-Qualified Contract may change the ownership of the Contract prior to the last Annuity Commencement Date, and each Participant, in like manner, may change the ownership interest in a Contract.

A change of ownership will not be binding on us until we receive written notification. When we receive such notification, the change will be effective as of the date on which the request for change was signed by the Owner or Participant, as appropriate, but the change will be without prejudice to us on account of any payment we make or any action we take before receiving the change. If you change the Owner of a Non-Qualified Contract, you will become immediately liable for the payment of taxes on any gain realized under the Contract prior to the change of ownership, including possible liability for a 10% federal excise tax.

Death of Participant

If your Contract is a Non-Qualified Contract and you die prior to the Annuitant and before the Annuity Commencement Date, special distribution rules apply. In that case, your Account Value, plus or minus any Market Value Adjustment, must be distributed to your ''designated beneficiary'' within the meaning of Section 72(s) of the Internal Revenue Code, either (1) as a lump sum within 5 years after your death or (2) if in the form of an annuity, over a period not greater than the life or expected life of the designated beneficiary, with payments beginning no later than one year after your death.

The person you have named as Beneficiary under your Contract, if any, will be the ''designated beneficiary.''

If the named Beneficiary is not living, the Annuitant automatically becomes the designated beneficiary.

If the designated beneficiary is your surviving spouse, your spouse may elect to continue the Contract in his or her own name as Participant. If you were the Annuitant as well as the Participant, your surviving spouse (if the designated beneficiary) may elect to be named as both Participant and Annuitant and continue the Contract; in that case, we will not pay a death benefit and the Account Value will not be increased to reflect the death benefit calculation. In all other cases where you are the Annuitant, the death benefit provisions of the Contract control, subject to the condition that any Annuity Option elected complies with the special distribution requirements described above.

If your spouse elects to continue the Contract (either in the case where you are the Annuitant or in the case where you are not the Annuitant), your spouse must give us written notification within 60 days after we receive Due Proof of Death, and the special distributioon rules described above will apply on the death of your spouse.

If you are the Annuitant and you die during the Income Phase, the remaining value of the Annuity Option in place must be distributed at least as rapidly as the method of distribution under the option.

If the Participant is not a natural person, these distribution rules apply on a change in, or the death of, any Annuitant or Co-Annuitant.

Payments made in contravention of these special rules would adversely affect the treatment of the Contracts as annuity contracts under the Internal Revenue Code. Neither you nor the Beneficiary may exercise rights that would have that effect.

If yours is a Qualified Contract, any distributions upon your death will be subject to the laws and regulations governing the particular retirement or deferred compensation plan in connection with which the Qualified Contract was issued.

Voting of Series Fund Shares

We will vote Series Fund shares held by the Sub-Accounts at meetings of shareholders of the Series Fund or in connection with similar solicitations, but will follow voting instructions received from persons having the right to give voting instructions. During the Accumulation Phase, you will have the right to give voting instructions, except where the Owner has reserved this right. During the Income Phase, the Payee - that is the Annuitant or Beneficiary entitled to receive benefits - is the person having such voting rights. We will vote any shares attributable to us and Series Fund shares for which no timely voting instructions are received in the same proportion as the shares for which we receive instructions from Owners, Participants and Payees, as applicable.

Owners of Qualified Contracts issued on a group basis may be subject to other voting provisions of the particular plan and of the Investment Company Act of 1940. Employees who contribute to plans that are funded by the Contracts may be entitled to instruct the Owners as to how to instruct us to vote the Series Fund shares attributable to their contributions. Such plans may also provide the additional extent, if any, to which the Owners shall follow voting instructions of persons with rights under the plans. If no voting instructions are received from any such person with respect to a particular Participant Account, the Owner may instruct the Company as to how to vote the number of Series Fund shares for which instructions may be given.

Neither the Variable Account nor the Company is under any duty to provide information concerning the voting instruction rights of persons who may have such rights under plans, other than rights afforded by the Investment Company Act of 1940, or any duty to inquire as to the instructions received or the authority of Owners, Participants or others, as applicable, to instruct the voting of Series Fund shares. Except as the Variable Account or the Company has actual knowledge to the contrary, the instructions given by Owners under Group Contracts and Payees will be valid as they affect the Variable Account, the Company and any others having voting instruction rights with respect to the Variable Account.

All Series Fund proxy material, together with an appropriate form to be used to give voting instructions, will be provided to each person having the right to give voting instructions at least 10 days prior to each meeting of the shareholders of the Series Fund. We will determine the number of Series Fund shares as to which each such person is entitled to give instructions as of the record date set by the Series Fund for such meeting, which is expected to be not more than 90 days prior to each such meeting. Prior to the Annuity Commencement Date, the number of Series Fund shares as to which voting instructions may be given to the Company is determined by dividing the value of all of the Variable Accumulation Units of the particular Sub-Account credited to the Participant Account by the net asset value of one Series Fund share as of the same date. On or after the Annuity Commencement Date, the number of Series Fund shares as to which such instructions may be given by a Payee is determined by dividing the reserve held by the Company in the Sub-Account with respect to the particular Payee by the net asset value of a Series Fund share as of the same date. After the Annuity Commencement Date, the number of Series Fund shares as to which a Payee is entitled to give voting instructions will generally decrease due to the decrease in the reserve.

Periodic Reports

During the Accumulation Period we will send you, or such other person having voting rights, at least once during each Account Year, a statement showing the number, type and value of Accumulation Units credited to your Account and the Fixed Accumulation Value of your Account, which statement shall be accurate as of a date not more than 2 months previous to the date of mailing. These periodic statements contain important information concerning your transactions with respect to a Contract. It is your obligation to review each such statement carefully and to report to us, at the address or telephone number provided on the statement, any errors or discrepancies in the information presented therein within 60 days of the date of such statement. Unless we receive notice of any such error or discrepancy from you within such period, we may not be responsible for correcting the error or discrepancy.

In addition, every person having voting rights will receive such reports or prospectuses concerning the Variable Account and the Series Fund as may be required by the Investment Company Act of 1940 and the Securities Act of 1933. We will also send such statements reflecting transactions in your Account as may be required by applicable laws, rules and regulations.

Upon request, we will provide you with information regarding fixed and variable accumulation values.

Substitution of Securities

Shares of any or all Series of the Series Fund may not always be available for investment under the Contract. We may add or delete Series or other investment companies as variable investment options under the Contracts. We may also substitute shares of another Series or shares of another registered open-end investment company or unit investment trust for the shares held in any Sub-Account, provided that the substitution has been approved , if required, by the SEC. In the event of any substitution pursuant to this provision, we may make appropriate endorsement to the Contract to reflect the substitution.

Change in Operation of Variable Account

At our election and subject to any necessary vote by persons having the right to give instructions with respect to the voting of Series Fund shares held by the Sub-Accounts, the Variable Account may be operated as a management company under the Investment Company Act of 1940 or it may be deregistered under the Investment Company Act of 1940 in the event registration is no longer required. Deregistration of the Variable Account requires an order by the SEC. In the event of any change in the operation of the Variable Account pursuant to this provision, we may make appropriate endorsement to the Contract to reflect the change and take such other action as we deem necessary and appropriate to effect the change.

Splitting Units

We reserve the right to split or combine the value of Variable Accumulation Units, Annuity Units or any of them. In effecting any such change of unit values, strict equity will be preserved and no change will have a material effect on the benefits or other provisions of the Contracts.

Modification

Upon notice to the Owner and Participant(s), (or the Payee(s) during the Income Phase), we may modify the Contract if such modification: (i) is necessary to make the Contract or the Variable Account comply with any law or regulation issued by a governmental agency to which the Company or the Variable Account is subject; (ii) is necessary to assure continued qualification of the Contract under the Internal Revenue Code or other federal or state laws relating to retirement annuities or annuity contracts; (iii) is necessary to reflect a change in the operation of the Variable Account or the Sub-Account(s) (see ''Change in Operation of Variable Account''); (iv) provides additional Variable Account and/or fixed accumulation options; or (v) as may otherwise be in the best interests of Owners, Participants, or Payees, as applicable. In the event of any such modification, we may make appropriate endorsement in the Contract to reflect such modification.

In addition, upon notice to the Owner, we may modify a Group Contract to change the withdrawal charges, Account Fees, mortality and expense risk charges, administrative expense charges, the tables used in determining the amount of the first monthly variable annuity and fixed annuity payments and the formula used to calculate the Market Value Adjustment, provided that such modification applies only to Participant Accounts established after the effective date of such modification. In order to exercise our modification rights in these particular instances, we must notify the Owner of such modification in writing. The notice shall specify the effective date of such modification which must be at least 60 days following the date we mail notice of modification. All of the charges and the annuity tables which are provided in the Group Contract prior to any such modification will remain in effect permanently, unless improved by the Company, with respect to Participant Accounts established prior to the effective date of such modification.

Limitation or Discontinuance of New Participants

We may limit or discontinue the acceptance of new Applications and the issuance of new Certificates under a Group Contract by giving 30 days prior written notice to the Owner. This will not affect rights or benefits with respect to any Participant Accounts established under such Group Contract prior to the effective date of such limitation or discontinuance.

Reservation of Rights

We reserve the right, to the extent permitted by law, to: (1) combine any 2 or more variable accounts; (2) add or delete Series, sub-series thereof or other investment companies and corresponding Sub-Accounts; (3) add or remove Guarantee Periods available at any time for election by a Participant; and (4) restrict or eliminate any of the voting rights of Participants (or Owners) or other persons who have voting rights as to the Variable Account. Where required by law, we will obtain approval of changes from Participants or any appropriate regulatory authority. In the event of any change pursuant to this provision, we may make appropriate endorsement to the Contract to reflect the change.

Right to Return

If you are not satisfied with your Contract, you may return it by mailing or delivering it to us at our Annuity Mailing Address as shown on the cover of this Prospectus within 10 days after it was delivered to you. When we receive the returned Contract, it will be cancelled and we will refund to you your Account Value. However, if applicable state law requires, we will return the full amount of any Purchase Payment(s) we received. State law may also require us to give you a longer ''free look'' period or allow you to return the Contract to your sales representative.

If you are establishing an Individual Retirement Account (''IRA''), the Internal Revenue Code requires that we give you a disclosure statement containing certain information about the Contract and applicable legal requirements. We must give you this statement on or before the date the IRA is established. If we give you the disclosure statement before the seventh day preceding the date the IRA is established, you will not have any right of revocation under the Code. If we give you the disclosure statement at a later date, then you may give us a notice of revocation at any time within 7 days after your Contract Date. Upon such revocation, we will refund your Purchase Payment(s). This right of revocation with respect to an IRA is in addition to the return privilege set forth in the preceding paragraph. We allow a Participant establishing an IRA a ''ten day free-look,'' notwithstanding the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.

TAX CONSIDERATIONS

This section provides general information on the federal income tax consequences of ownership of a Contract based upon our understanding of current federal tax laws. Actual federal tax consequences will vary depending on, among other things, the type of retirement plan under which your Contract is issued. Also, legislation altering the current tax treatment of annuity contracts could be enacted in the future and could apply retroactively to Contracts that were purchased before the date of enactment. We make no attempt to consider any applicable federal estate, federal gift, state, or other tax laws. We also make no guarantee regarding the federal, state, or local tax status of any Contract or any transaction involving any Contract. You should consult a qualified tax professional for advice before purchasing a Contract or executing any other transaction (such as a rollover, distribution, withdrawal or payment) involving a Contract.

U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations

The following discussion applies only to those Contracts issued in the United States. For a discussion of tax considerations effecting Contracts issued in Puerto Rico, see "Puerto Rico Tax Considerations," below.

     Deductibility of Purchase Payments

For federal income tax purposes, Purchase Payments made under Non-Qualified Contracts are not deductible. Under certain circumstances, Purchase Payments made under Qualified Contracts may be excludible or deductible from taxable income. Any such amounts will also be excluded from the "investment in the contract" for purposes of determining the taxable portion of any distributions from a Qualified Contract.

     Pre-Distribution Taxation of Contracts

Generally, an increase in the value of a Contract will not give rise to a current income tax liability to the Owner of a Contract or to any payee under the Contract until a distribution is received from the Contract. However, certain assignments or pledges of a Contract or loans under a Contract will be treated as distributions to the Owner of the Contract and will accelerate the taxability of any increases in the value of a Contract.

Also, corporate (or other non-natural person) Owners of a Non-Qualified Contract will generally incur a current tax liability on Account Value increases. There are certain exceptions to this current taxation rule, including: (i) any Contract that is an "immediate annuity", which the Internal Revenue Code (the "Code") defines as a single premium contract with an annuity commencement date within one year of the date of purchase which provides for a series of substantially equal periodic payments (to be made not less frequently than annually) during the annuity period, and (ii) any Contract that the non-natural person holds as agent for a natural person (such as where a bank or other entity holds a Contract as trustee under a trust agreement).

You should note that a qualified retirement plan generally provides tax deferral regardless of whether the plan invests in an annuity contract. For that reason, no decision to purchase a Qualified Contract should be based on the assumption that the purchase of a Qualified Contract is necessary to obtain tax deferral under a qualified plan.

     Distributions and Withdrawals from Non-Qualified Contracts

The Account Value of a Non-Qualified Contract will generally include both (i) an amount attributable to Purchase Payments, the return of which will not be taxable, and (ii) an amount attributable to investment earnings, the receipt of which will be taxable at ordinary income rates. The relative portions of any particular distribution that derive from nontaxable Purchase Payments and taxable investment earnings depend upon the nature and the timing of that distribution.

Any withdrawal of less than your entire Account Value under a Non-Qualified Contract before the Annuity Commencement Date, must be treated as a receipt of investment earnings. You may not treat such withdrawals as a non-taxable return of Purchase Payments unless you have first withdrawn the entire amount of the Account Value that is attributable to investment earnings. For purposes of determining whether an Owner has withdrawn the entire amount of the investment earnings under a Non-Qualified Contract, the Code provides that all Non-Qualified deferred annuity contracts issued by the same company to the same during any one calendar year must be treated as one annuity contract.

A Payee who receives annuity payments under a Non-Qualified Contract after the Annuity Commencement Date, will generally be able to treat a portion of each payment as a nontaxable return of Purchase Payments and to treat only the remainder of each such payment as taxable investment earnings. Until the Purchase Payments have been fully recovered in this manner, the nontaxable portion of each payment will be determined by the ratio of (i) the total amount of the Purchase Payments made under the Contract, to (ii) the Payee's expected return under the Contract. Once the Payee has received nontaxable payments in an amount equal to total Purchase Payments, no further exclusion is allowed and all future distributions will constitute fully taxable ordinary income. If payments are terminated upon the death of the Annuitant or other Payee before the Purchase Payments have been fully recovered, the unrecovered Purchase Payments may be deducted on the final return of the Annuitant or other Payee.

A penalty tax of 10% may also apply to taxable cash withdrawals, including lump-sum payments from Non-Qualified Contracts. This penalty will generally not apply to distributions made after age 59 1/2, to distributions pursuant to the death or disability of the owner, or to distributions that are a part of a series of substantially equal periodic payments made annually under a lifetime annuity, or to distributions under an immediate annuity (as defined above).

Death benefits paid upon the death of a contract owner are not life insurance benefits and will generally be includable in the income of the recipient to the extent they represent investment earnings under the contract. For this purpose, the amount of the "investment in the contract" is not affected by the owner's or annuitant's death, i.e., the investment in the contract must still be determined by reference to the total Purchase Payments (excluding amounts that were deductible by, or excluded from the gross income of, the Owner of a Contract), less any Purchase Payments that were amounts previously received which were not includable in income. Special mandatory distribution rules also apply after the death of the Owner when the beneficiary is not the surviving spouse of the Owner.

If death benefits are distributed in a lump sum, the taxable amount of those benefits will be determined in the same manner as upon a full surrender of the contract. If death benefits are distributed under an annuity option, the taxable amount of those benefits will be determined in the same manner as annuity payments, as described above.

 

     Distributions and Withdrawals from Qualified Contracts

In most cases, all of the distributions you receive from a Qualified Contract will constitute fully taxable ordinary income. Also, a 10% penalty tax will apply to distributions prior to age 59 1/2, except in certain circumstances.

If you receive an eligible rollover distribution from a Qualified Contract (other than from a Contract issued for use with an individual retirement account) and roll over some or all of that distribution to another eligible plan, the portion of such distribution that is rolled over will not be includible in your income. However, any eligible rollover distribution will be subject to 20% mandatory withholding as described below. Because the amount of the cash paid to you as an eligible rollover distribution will be reduced by this withholding, you will not be able to roll over the entire account balance under your Contract, unless you use other funds equal to the tax withholding to complete the rollover.

An "eligible rollover distribution" is any distribution to you of all or any portion of the balance to the credit of your account, other than:

o

A distribution which is one of a series of substantially equal periodic payments made annually under a lifetime annuity or for a specified period of ten years or more;

 

 

o

Any required minimum distribution, or

 

 

o

Any hardship distribution.

Only you or your spouse may elect to roll over a distribution to an eligible retirement plan.

     Withholding

In the case of an eligible rollover distribution (as defined above) from a Qualified Contract (other than from a Contract issued for use with an individual retirement account), we (or the plan administrator) must withhold and remit to the U.S. Government 20% of the distribution, unless the Participant or Payee elects to make a direct rollover of the distribution to another qualified retirement plan that is eligible to receive the rollover; however, only you or your spouse may elect a direct rollover. In the case of a distribution from (i) a Non-Qualified Contract, (ii) a Qualified Contract issued for use with an individual retirement account, or (iii) a Qualified Contract where the distribution is not an eligible rollover distribution, we will withhold and remit to the U.S. Government a part of the taxable portion of each distribution unless, prior to the distribution, the Participant or Payee provides us his or her taxpayer identification number and instructs us (in the manner prescribed) not to withhold. The Participant or Payee may credit against his or her federal income tax liability for the year of distribution any amounts that we (or the plan administrator) withhold.

     Investment Diversification and Control

The Treasury Department has issued regulations that prescribe investment diversification requirements for mutual fund series underlying nonqualified variable contracts. All Non-Qualified Contracts must comply with these regulations to qualify as annuities for federal income tax purposes. The owner of a Non-Qualified Contract that does not meet these guidelines will be subject to current taxation on annual increases in value of the Contract. We believe that each Fund available as an investment option under the Contract complies with these regulations.

The preamble to the 1986 investment diversification regulations stated that the Internal Revenue Service may promulgate guidelines under which an owner's excessive control over investments underlying the contract will preclude the contract from qualifying as an annuity for federal tax purposes. We cannot predict whether such guidelines, if and when they may be promulgated, will be retroactive. We reserve the right to modify the Contract and/or the Variable Account to the extent necessary to comply with any such guidelines, but cannot assure that such modifications would satisfy any retroactive guidelines.

     Tax Treatment of the Company and the Variable Account

As a life insurance company under the Code, we will record and report operations of the Variable Account separately from other operations. The Variable Account will not, however, constitute a regulated investment company or any other type of taxable entity distinct from our other operations. Under present law, we will not incur tax on the income of the Variable Account (consisting primarily of interest, dividends, and net capital gains) if we use this income to increase reserves under Contracts participating in the Variable Account.

     Qualified Retirement Plans

You may use Qualified Contracts with several types of qualified retirement plans. Because tax consequences will vary with the type of qualified retirement plan and the plan's specific terms and conditions, we provide below only brief, general descriptions of the consequences that follow from using Qualified Contracts in connection with various types of qualified retirement plans. We stress that the rights of any person to any benefits under these plans may be subject to the terms and conditions of the plans themselves, regardless of the terms of the Qualified Contracts that you are using. These terms and conditions may include restrictions on, among other things, ownership, transferability, assignability, contributions and distributions.

     Pension and Profit-Sharing Plans

Sections 401(a), 401(k) and 403(a) of the Code permit business employers and certain associations to establish various types of retirement plans for employees. The Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 eliminated most differences between qualified retirement plans of corporations and those of self-employed individuals. Self-employed persons, as a general rule, may therefore use Qualified Contracts as a funding vehicle for their retirement plans.

     Tax-Sheltered Annuities

Section 403(b) of the Code permits public school employees and employees of certain types of charitable, educational and scientific organizations specified in Section 501(c)(3) of the Code to purchase annuity contracts and, subject to certain limitations, exclude the amount of purchase payments from gross income for tax purposes. The Code imposes restrictions on cash withdrawals from Section 403(b) annuities.

If the Contracts are to receive tax-deferred treatment, cash withdrawals of amounts attributable to salary reduction contributions (other than withdrawals of accumulation account value as of December 31, 1988) may be made only when the Participant attains age 59 1/2, separates from service with the employer, dies or becomes disabled (within the meaning of Section 72(m)(7) of the Code). These restrictions apply to (i) any post-1988 salary reduction contributions, (ii) any growth or interest on post-1988 salary reduction contributions, and (iii) any growth or interest on pre-1989 salary reduction contributions that occurs on or after January 1, 1989, and (iv) any pre-1989 salary reduction contributions since we do not maintain records that separately account for such contributions. It is permissible, however, to withdraw post-1988 salary reduction contributions (but not the earnings attributable to such contributions) in cases of financial hardship. While the Internal Revenue Service has not issued specific rules defining financial hardship, we expect that to qualify for a hardship distribution, the Participant must have an immediate and heavy bona fide financial need and lack other resources reasonably available to satisfy the need. Hardship withdrawals (as well as certain other premature withdrawals) will be subject to a 10% tax penalty, in addition to any withdrawal charge applicable under the Contracts. Under certain circumstances the 10% tax penalty will not apply if the withdrawal is for medical expenses.

Section 403(b) annuities, like IRAs, are subject to required minimum distributions under the Code. Section 403(b) annuities are unique, however, in that any account balance accruing before January 1, 1987 (the "pre-1987 balance") needs to comply with only the minimum distribution incidental benefit (MDIB) rule and not also with the minimum distribution rules set forth in Section 401(a)(9) of the Code. This special treatment for any pre-1987 balance is, however, conditioned upon the issuer identifying the pre-1987 balance and maintaining accurate records of changes to the balance. Since we do not maintain such records, your pre-1987 balance, if any, will not be eligible for special distribution treatment.

Under the terms of a particular Section 403(b) plan, the Participant may be entitled to transfer all or a portion of the Account Value to one or more alternative funding options. Participants should consult the documents governing their plan and the person who administers the plan for information as to such investment alternatives.

     Individual Retirement Accounts

Sections 219 and 408 of the Code permit eligible individuals to contribute to an individual retirement program, including Simplified Employee Pension Plans, Employer/Association of Employees Established Individual Retirement Account Trusts, and Simple Retirement Accounts. Such IRAs are subject to limitations on contribution levels, the persons who may be eligible, and on the time when distributions may commence. In addition, certain distributions from some other types of retirement plans may be placed in an IRA on a tax-deferred basis. If we sell Contracts for use with IRAs, the Internal Revenue Service or other agency may impose supplementary information requirements. We will provide purchasers of the Contracts for such purposes with any necessary information. You will have the right to revoke the Contract under certain circumstances, as described in the section of this Prospectus entitled "Right to Return."

     Roth IRAs

Section 408A of the Code permits an individual to contribute to an individual retirement program called a Roth IRA. Unlike contributions to a traditional IRA under Section 408 of the Code, contributions to a Roth IRA are not tax-deductible. Provided certain conditions are satisfied, distributions are generally tax-free. Like traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs are subject to limitations on contribution amounts and the timing of distributions. If an individual converts a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA the full amount of the IRA is included in taxable income. The Internal Revenue Service and other agencies may impose special information requirements with respect to Roth IRAs. We will provide the necessary information for Contracts issued in connection with Roth IRAs.

Puerto Rico Tax Considerations

The Contract offered by this Prospectus is considered an annuity contract under Section 1022 of the Puerto Rico Internal Revenue Code of 1994, as amended (the "1994 Code"). Under the current provisions of the 1994 Code, no income tax is payable on increases in value of accumulation shares of annuity units credited to a variable annuity contract until payments are made to the annuitant or other payee under such contract.

When payments are made from your Contract in the form of an annuity, the annuitant or other payee will be required to include as gross income the lesser of the amount received during the taxable year or the portion of the amount received equal to 3% of the aggregate premiums or other consideration paid for the annuity. The amount, if any, in excess of the included amount is excluded from gross income as a return of premium. After an amount equal to the aggregate premiums or other consideration paid for the annuity has been excluded from gross income, all of the subsequent annuity payments are considered to be taxable income.

When a payment under a Contract is made in a lump sum, the amount of the payment would be included in the gross income of the Annuitant or other Payee to the extent it exceeds the Annuitant's aggregate premiums or other consideration paid.

The provisions of the 1994 Code with respect to qualified retirement plans described in this Prospectus vary significantly from those under the Internal Revenue Code. Although we currently offer the Contract in Puerto Rico in connection with qualified retirement plans, the text of this Prospectus under the heading "Federal Tax Status" dealing with such qualified retirement plans is inapplicable to Puerto Rico and should be disregarded.

For information regarding the income tax consequences of owning a Contract, you should consult a qualified tax adviser.

ADMINISTRATION OF THE CONTRACTS

We perform certain administrative functions relating to the Contracts, Participant Accounts, and the Variable Account. These functions include, but are not limited to, maintaining the books and records of the Variable Account and the Sub-Accounts; maintaining records of the name, address, taxpayer identification number, Contract number, Participant Account number and type, the status of each Participant Account and other pertinent information necessary to the administration and operation of the Contracts; processing Applications, Purchase Payments, transfers and full and partial withdrawals; issuing Contracts and Certificates; administering annuity payments; furnishing accounting and valuation services; reconciling and depositing cash receipts; providing confirmations; providing toll-free customer service lines; and furnishing telephonic transfer services.

DISTRIBUTION OF THE CONTRACTS

We offer the Contracts on a continuous basis. The Contracts are sold by licensed insurance agents in those states where the Contracts may be lawfully sold. Such agents will be registered representatives of broker-dealers registered under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 who are members of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. and who have entered into distribution agreements with the Company and the general distributor, Clarendon Insurance Agency, Inc. (''Clarendon''), One Sun Life Executive Park, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481. Clarendon, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Company, is registered with the SEC under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as a broker-dealer and is a member of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.

Commissions and other distribution compensation will be paid by the Company to the selling agents and will not be more than 7.34% of Purchase Payments. In addition, after the first Account Year, broker-dealers who have entered into distribution agreements with the Company may receive an annual renewal commission of no more than 1.00% of Participant Account Value. In addition to commissions, the Company may, from time to time, pay or allow additional promotional incentives, in the form of cash or other compensation. We reserve the right to offer these additional incentives only to certain broker-dealers that sell or are expected to sell during specified time periods certain minimum amounts of the Contracts or Certificates or other contracts offered by the Company. Promotional incentives may change at any time. Commissions will not be paid with respect to Accounts established for the personal account of employees of the Company or any of its affiliates, or of persons engaged in the distribution of the Contracts, or of immediate family members of such employees or persons. In addition, commissions may be waived or reduced in connection with certain transactions described in this Prospectus under the heading ''Waivers; Reduced Charges; Credits; Bonus Guaranteed Interest Rates.'' During 1999, 2000 and 2001, approximately $2,705,923, $1,332,133, and $579,507, respectively, was paid to and retained by Clarendon in connection with distribution of the Contracts.

PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

From time to time the Variable Account may publish reports to shareholders, sales literature and advertisements containing performance information relating to the variable options. This information may include standardized and non-standardized ''Average Annual Total Return,'' ''Cumulative Growth Rate'' and ''Compound Growth Rate.'' We may also advertise ''yield'' for the Government Securities Series and High Yield, and ''yield'' and ''effective yield'' for the Money Market Sub-Accounts.

Average Annual Total Return measures the net income of the variable option and any realized or unrealized gains or losses of the Series in which it invests, over the period stated. Average Annual Total Return figures are annualized and represent the average annual percentage change in the value of an investment in a variable option over that period. Standardized Average Annual Total Return information covers the period after the Variable Account was established or, if shorter, the life of the Series. Non-standardized Average Annual Total Return covers the life of each Series, which may predate the Variable Account. Cumulative Growth Rate represents the cumulative change in the value of an investment in the Sub-Account for the period stated, and is arrived at by calculating the change in the Accumulation Unit Value of a Sub-Account between the first and last day of the period being measured. The difference is expressed as a percentage of the Accumulation Unit Value at the beginning of the base period. ''Compound Growth Rate'' is an annualized measure, calculated by applying a formula that determines the level of return which, if earned over the entire period, would produce the cumulative return.

Average Annual Total Return figures assume an initial Purchase Payment of $1,000 and reflect all applicable withdrawal and Contract charges. The Cumulative Growth Rate and Compound Growth Rate figures that we advertise do not reflect withdrawal charges or the annual Account Fee, although such figures reflect all recurring charges. Results calculated without withdrawal and/or certain Contract charges will be higher. We may also use other types of rates of return that do not reflect withdrawal and Contract charges.

The performance figures used by the Variable Account are based on the actual historical performance of the Series Fund for the specified periods, and the figures are not intended to indicate future performance. For periods before the date the Contracts became available, we calculate the performance information for the Sub-Account on a hypothetical basis. To do this, we reflect deductions of the current Contract fees and charges from the historical performance of the corresponding Series.

Yield is a measure of the net dividend and interest income earned over a specific one month or 30-day period (7-day period for the Money Market Series Sub-Account), expressed as a percentage of the value of the Sub-Account's Accumulation Units. Yield is an annualized figure, which means that we assume that the Sub-Account generates the same level of net income over a one-year period and compound that income on a semi-annual basis. We calculate the effective yield for the Money Market Sub-Account similarly, but include the increase due to assumed compounding. The Money Market Sub-Account's effective yield will be slightly higher than its yield as a result of its compounding effect.

The Variable Account may also from time to time compare its investment performance to various unmanaged indices or other variable annuities and may refer to certain rating and other organizations in its marketing materials. More information on performance and our computations is set forth in the Statement of Additional Information.

The Company may also advertise the ratings and other information assigned to it by independent industry ratings organizations. Some of these organizations are A.M. Best, Moody's Investor's Service, Standard and Poor's Insurance Rating Services, and Fitch. Each year A.M. Best reviews the financial status of thousands of insurers, culminating in the assignment of Best's rating. These ratings reflect A.M. Best's current opinion of the relevant financial strength and operating performance of an insurance company in comparison to the norms of the life/health industry. Best's ratings range from A++ to F. Standard and Poor's and Fitch's ratings measure the ability of an insurance company to meet its obligations under insurance policies it issues. These two ratings do not measure the insurance company's ability to meet non-policy obligations. Ratings in general do not relate to the performance of the Sub-Accounts. We may also advertise endorsements from organizations, individuals or other parties that recommend the Company or the Contracts. We may occasionally include in advertisements (1) comparisons of currently taxable and tax deferred investment programs, based on selected tax brackets; or (2) discussions of alternative investment vehicles and general economic conditions.

AVAILABLE INFORMATION

The Company and the Variable Account have filed with the SEC registration statements under the Securities Act of 1933 relating to the Contracts. This Prospectus does not contain all of the information contained in the registration statements and their exhibits. For further information regarding the Variable Account, the Company and the Contracts, please refer to the registration statements and their exhibits.

In addition, the Company is subject to the informational requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. We file reports and other information with the SEC to meet these requirements. You can inspect and copy this information and our registration statements at the SEC's public reference facilities at the following locations: Washington, D.C. - 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Room 1024, Washington, D.C. 20549; Chicago, Illinois - 500 West Madison Street, Chicago, IL 60661. The Washington, D.C. office will also provide copies by mail for a fee. You may also find these materials on the SEC's website (http://www.sec.gov).

INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN DOCUMENTS BY REFERENCE

The Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2001 filed with the SEC pursuant to Section 13(a) or 15(d) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the ''Exchange Act'') is incorporated herein by reference. All documents or reports we file pursuant to Section 13(a), 13(c), 14 or 15(d) of the Exchange Act, after the date of this prospectus and prior to the termination of the offering, shall be deemed incorporated by reference into the prospectus.

The Company will furnish, without charge, to each person to whom a copy of this Prospectus is delivered, upon the written or oral request of such person, a copy of the documents referred to above which have been incorporated by reference into this Prospectus, other than exhibits to such document (unless such exhibits are specifically incorporated by reference in this Prospectus). Requests for such document should be directed to the Secretary, Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.), One Sun Life Executive Park, Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481, telephone (800) 225-3950.

STATE REGULATION

The Company is subject to the laws of the State of Delaware governing life insurance companies and to regulation by the Commissioner of Insurance of Delaware. An annual statement is filed with the Commissioner of Insurance on or before March lst in each year relating to the operations of the Company for the preceding year and its financial condition on December 31st of such year. Its books and records are subject to review or examination by the Commissioner or his agents at any time and a full examination of its operations is conducted at periodic intervals.

The Company is also subject to the insurance laws and regulations of the other states and jurisdictions in which it is licensed to operate. The laws of the various jurisdictions establish supervisory agencies with broad administrative powers with respect to licensing to transact business, overseeing trade practices, licensing agents, approving policy forms, establishing reserve requirements, fixing maximum interest rates on life insurance policy loans and minimum rates for accumulation of surrender values, prescribing the form and content of required financial statements and regulating the type and amounts of investments permitted. Each insurance company is required to file detailed annual reports with supervisory agencies in each of the fire jurisdictions in which it does business and its operations and accounts are subject to examination by such agencies at regular intervals.

In addition, many states regulate affiliated groups of insurers, such as the Company, Sun Life (Canada) and its affiliates, under insurance holding company legislation. Under such laws, inter-company transfers of assets and dividend payments from insurance subsidiaries may be subject to prior notice or approval, depending on the size of such transfers and payments in relation to the financial positions of the companies involved. Under insurance guaranty fund laws in most states, insurers doing business therein can be assessed (up to prescribed limits) for policyholder losses incurred by insolvent companies. The amount of any future assessments of the Company under these laws cannot be reasonably estimated. However, most of these laws do provide that an assessment may be excused or deferred if it would threaten an insurer's own financial strength and many permit the deduction of all or a portion of any such assessment from any future premium or similar taxes payable.

Although the federal government generally does not directly regulate the business of insurance, federal initiatives often have an impact on the business in a variety of ways. Current and proposed federal measures which may significantly affect the insurance business include employee benefit regulation, removal of barriers preventing banks from engaging in the insurance business, tax law changes affecting the taxation of insurance companies, the tax treatment of insurance products and its impact on the relative desirability of various personal investment vehicles.

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

There are no pending legal proceedings affecting the Variable Account. We and our subsidiaries are engaged in various kinds of routine litigation which, in management's judgment, is not of material importance to our respective total assets or material with respect to the Variable Account.

ACCOUNTANTS

The financial statements of the Variable Account for the year ended December 31, 2001 included in the Statement of Additional Information and the financial statements of the Company for the years ended December 31, 2001, 2000, and 1999, included in the Statement of Additional Information have been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP, independent auditors, as stated in their reports appearing therein, and are included in reliance upon the report of such firm given upon their authority as experts in accounting and auditing.

FINANCIAL STATEMENTS

The financial statements of the Company which are included in this Statement of Additional Information should be considered only as bearing on the ability of the Company to meet its obligations with respect to amounts allocated to the Fixed Account and with respect to the death benefit and the Company's assumption of the mortality and expense risks. They should not be considered as bearing on the investment performance of the Fund shares held in the Sub-Accounts of the Variable Account.

The financial statements of the Variable Account for the year ended December 31, 2001 are also included in the Statement of Additional Information.

TABLE OF CONTENTS OF STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Calculation of Performance Data

Advertising and Sales Literature

Calculations

Example of Variable Accumulation Unit Value Calculation

Example of Variable Annuity Unit Calculation

Example of Variable Annuity Payment Calculation

Distribution of the Contracts

Designation and Change of Beneficiary

Custodian

Financial Statements

This Prospectus sets forth information about the Contracts and the Variable Account that a prospective purchaser should know before investing. Additional information about the Contracts and the Variable Account has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission in a Statement of Additional Information dated April 30, 2002 which is incorporated herein by reference. The Statement of Additional Information is available upon request and without charge from Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.). To receive a copy, return this request form to the address shown below or telephone (800) 752-7215.

________________________________________________________________________________________

To:       Sun Life Assurance

           Company of Canada (U.S.)

           c/o Retirement Products and Services

           P.O. Box 9133

           Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481

           Please send me a Statement of Additional Information for

           MFS Regatta Gold Variable and Fixed Annuity

           Sun Life of Canada (U.S.) Variable Account F.

 

Name           _____________________________________________

Address       ______________________________________________

City             ____________________ State_____ Zip                  

Telephone                                                                     

APPENDIX A

GLOSSARY

The following terms as used in this Prospectus have the indicated meanings:

ACCOUNT or PARTICIPANT ACCOUNT: An account established for each Participant to which Net Purchase Payments are credited.

ACCOUNT VALUE: The Variable Accumulation Value, if any, plus the Fixed Accumulation Value, if any, of your Account for any Valuation Period.

ACCOUNT YEAR and ACCOUNT ANNIVERSARY: Your first Account Year is the period of (a) 12 full calendar months plus (b) the part of the calendar month in which we issue your Contract (if not on the first day of the month), beginning with the Contract Date. Your Account Anniversary is the first day immediately after the end of an Account Year. Each Account Year after the first is the 12 calendar month period that begins on your Account Anniversary. If, for example, the Contract Date is in March, the first Account Year will be determined from the Contract Date but will end on the last day of March in the following year; your Account Anniversary is April 1 and all Account Years after the first will be measured from April 1.

ACCUMULATION PHASE: The period before the Annuity Commencement Date and during the lifetime of the Annuitant during which you make Purchase Payments under the Contract. This is called the ''Accumulation Period'' in the Contract.

ANNUITANT: The person or persons named in the Application and on whose life the first annuity payment is to be made. In a Non-Qualified Contract, if you name someone other than yourself as Annuitant, you may also name a co-annuitant. If you do, all provisions of the Contract based on the death of the Annuitant will be based on the date of death of the last surviving of the persons named. By example, if the Annuitant dies prior to the Annuity Commencement Date, the co-annuitant will become the new annuitant. The death benefit will become due only on the death before the Annuity Commencement Date of the last surviving annuitant and co-annuitant named. These persons are referred to collectively in the Contract as ''Annuitants.'' If you have not named a sole Annuitant on the 30th day before the Annuity Commencement Date and both the Annuitant and Co-Annuitant are living, the Co-Annuitant will be the sole Annuitant during the Income Phase.

*ANNUITY COMMENCEMENT DATE: The date on which the first annuity payment under each Contract is to be made.

*ANNUITY OPTION: The method you choose for making annuity payments.

ANNUITY UNIT: A unit of measure used in the calculation of the amount of the second and each subsequent Variable Annuity payment from the Variable Account.

APPLICATION: The document signed by you or other evidence acceptable to us that serves as your application for participation under a Group Contract.

*BENEFICIARY: The person or entity having the right to receive the death benefit and, for Non-Qualified Contracts, who is the ''designated beneficiary'' for purposes of Section 72(s) of the Internal Revenue Code.

BUSINESS DAY: Any day the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading.

CERTIFICATE: The document for each Participant which evidences the coverage of the Participant under a Group Contract.

COMPANY: Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada (U.S.).

CONTRACT DATE: The date on which we issue your Contract. This is called the ''Issue Date'' in the Contract.

DEATH BENEFIT DATE: If you have elected a death benefit payment option before the Annuitant's death that remains in effect, the date on which we receive Due Proof of Death. If your Beneficiary elects the death benefit payment option, the later of (a) the date on which we receive the Beneficiary's election and (b) the date on which we receive Due Proof of Death. If we do not receive the Beneficiary's election within 60 days after we receive Due Proof of Death, the Death Benefit Date will be the last day of the 60 day period and we will pay the death benefit in cash.

DUE PROOF OF DEATH: An original certified copy of an official death certificate, an original certified copy of a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction as to the finding of death, or any other proof satisfactory to the Company.

EXPIRATION DATE: The last day of a Guarantee Period.

FIXED ACCOUNT: The general account of the Company, consisting of all assets of the Company other than those allocated to a separate account of the Company.

FIXED ACCOUNT VALUE: The value of that portion of your Account allocated to the Fixed Account.

FIXED ANNUITY: An annuity with payments which do not vary as to dollar amount.

GROUP CONTRACT: A Contract issued by the Company on a group basis.

GUARANTEE AMOUNT: Each separate allocation of Account Value to a particular Guarantee Period (including interest earned thereon).

GUARANTEE PERIOD: The period for which a Guaranteed Interest Rate is credited.

GUARANTEED INTEREST RATE: The rate of interest we credit on a compound annual basis during any Guarantee Period.

INCOME PHASE: The period on and after the Annuity Commencement Date and during the lifetime of the Annuitant during which we make annuity payments under the Contract.

NET INVESTMENT FACTOR: An index applied to measure the investment performance of a Sub-Account from one Valuation Period to the next. The Net Investment Factor may be greater or less than or equal to one.

NET PURCHASE PAYMENT: The portion of a Purchase Payment which remains after the deduction of any applicable premium tax or similar tax.

NON-QUALIFIED CONTRACT: A Contract used in connection with a retirement plan that does not receive favorable federal income tax treatment under Sections 401, 403, 408, or 408A of the Internal Revenue Code. The Participant's interest in the Contract must be owned by a natural person or agent for a natural person for the Contract to receive income tax treatment as an annuity.

OWNER: The person, persons or entity entitled to the ownership rights stated in a Group Contract and in whose name or names the Group Contract is issued. The Owner may designate a trustee or custodian of a retirement plan which meets the requirements of Section 401, Section 408(c), Section 408(k), Section 408(p) or Section 408A of the Internal Revenue Code to serve as legal owner of assets of a retirement plan, but the term ''Owner,'' as used herein, shall refer to the organization entering into the Group Contract.

PARTICIPANT: The person named in the Certificate who is entitled to exercise all rights and privileges of ownership under the Certificate, except as reserved by the Owner.

PAYEE: A recipient of payments under a Contract. The term includes an Annuitant or a Beneficiary who becomes entitled to benefits upon the death of the Annuitant.

PURCHASE PAYMENT (PAYMENT): An amount paid to the Company as consideration for the benefits provided by a Contract.

QUALIFIED CONTRACT: A Contract used in connection with a retirement plan which may receive favorable federal income tax treatment under Sections 401, 403, 408 or 408A of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

SEVEN-YEAR ANNIVERSARY: The seventh Account Anniversary and each succeeding Account Anniversary occurring at any seven year interval thereafter; for example, the 14th, 21st and 28th Account Anniversaries.

SUB-ACCOUNT: That portion of the Variable Account which invests in shares of a specific series of the Series Fund.

VALUATION PERIOD: The period of time from one determination of Variable Accumulation Unit or Annuity Unit values to the next subsequent determination of these values. Value determinations are made as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange on each day that the Exchange is open for trading.

VARIABLE ACCOUNT: Variable Account F of the Company, which is a separate account of the Company consisting of assets set aside by the Company, the investment performance of which is kept separate from that of the general assets of the Company.

VARIABLE ACCUMULATION UNIT: A unit of measure used in the calculation of Variable Account Value.

VARIABLE ACCOUNT VALUE: The value of that portion of your Account allocated to the Variable

Account.

VARIABLE ANNUITY: An annuity with payments which vary as to dollar amount in relation to the investment performance of the Variable Account.

*You specify these items on the Certificate Specifications page, and may change them, as we describe in this Prospectus.

APPENDIX B

CONDENSED FINANCIAL INFORMATION - ACCUMULATION UNIT VALUES

The following information should be read in conjunction with the Variable Account's financial statements appearing in the Statement of Additional Information, all of which has been audited by Deloitte & Touche LLP, independent auditors.

 

Accumulation

Accumulation

Number of

 

 

Unit Value

Unit Value

Accumulation

 

 

Beginning

End

Units End

 

Sub-Account

of Period

of Period

of Period

Year

 

 

 

 

 

Bond Series

$11.1632

11.8661

4,417,083

2001

 

$10.2650

$11.1632

2,088,013

2000

 

10.5921

10.2650

2,085,322

1999

 

10.0000

10.5921

1,182,239

1998

 

 

 

 

 

Capital Appreciation Series

39.7512

29.2754

24,550,072

2001

 

45.4986

39.7512

28,877,776

2000

 

34.7871

45.4986

32,846,090

1999

 

27,4057

34.7871

37,500,481

1998

 

22.5700

27.4057

35,528,897

1997

 

18.8932

22.5700

32,796,793

1996

 

14.2064

18.8392

27,782,739

1995

 

14.9429

14.2064

19,909,649

1994

 

12.8402

14.9429

13,245,142

1993

 

11.5021

12.8402

5,131,355

1992

 

10.0000

11.5021

124,454

1991

 

 

 

 

 

Capital Opportunities Series

23.5054

17.3945

11,144,270

2001

 

25.0521

23.5054

14,107,765

2000

 

17.2085

25.0521

12,845,672

1999

 

13.7450

17.2085

10,262,282

1998

 

10.9234

13.7450

6,175,224

1997

 

10.0000

10.9234

1,520,787

1996

 

 

 

 

 

Emerging Growth Series

31.8797

20.5656

21,321,485

2001

 

39.9489

31.8797

26,624,559

2000

 

23.0408

39.9489

28,061,821

1999

 

17.4544

23.0408

28,900,957

1998

 

14.5136

17.4544

25,039,986

1997

 

12.5675

14.5136

16,998,044

1996

 

10.0000

12.5675

5,346,104

1995

 

 

 

 

 

Emerging Markets Equity Series

8.5507

8.3446

1,639,749

2001

 

11.2207

8.5507

21,106,206

2000

 

7.4615

11.2207

2,761,034

1999

 

10.8010

7.4615

2,147,348

1998

 

9.9199

10.8010

2,159,228

1997

10.0000

9.9199

329,630

1996

 

 

 

 

 

Global Asset Allocation Series

17.8190

16.0044

4,444,930

2001

 

18.4932

17.8190

5,558,481

2000

 

15.8203

18.4932

6,188,330

1999

 

15.0565

15.8203

7,576,691

1998

 

13.7702

15.0565

7,928,833

1997

 

12.0393

13.7702

5,539,010

1996

 

10.0367

12.0393

2,141,041

1995

 

10.0000

10.0367

299,210

1994

 

 

 

 

 

Global Governments Series

14.2380

13.7399

2,160,876

2001

 

14.2506

14.2380

2,796,363

2000

 

15.2422

14.2506

3,941,088

1999

 

13.3854

15.2422

5,048,219

1998

 

13.6780

13.3854

6,127,641

1997

 

13.2523

13.6780

7,510,766

1996

 

11.6151

13.2523

8,272,858

1995

 

12.3309

11.6151

8,334,019

1994

 

10.5161

12.3309

7,008,613

1993

 

10.6125

10.5161

3,405,280

1992

 

10.0000

10.6125

44,190

1991

 

 

 

 

 

Global Growth Series

24.9770

19.7806

9,510,684

2001

 

29.1523

24.9770

12,229,092

2000

 

17.6676

29.1523

13,513,835

1999

 

15.6398

17.6676

14,522,129

1998

 

13.7523

15.6398

15,058,757

1997

 

12.3321

13.7523

13,989,946

1996

 

10.7803

12.3321

11,421,691

1995

 

10.6200

10.7803

9,182,555

1994

 

10.0000

10.6200

1,778,644

1993

 

 

 

 

 

Global Telecommunications Series

7.2836

4.1998

82,748

2001

10.0000

7.2836

10,929

2000

 

 

 

 

 

Global Total Return Series

18.5311

17.1432

3,629,158

2001

 

18.3636

18.5311

4,242,817

2000

 

17.1741

18.3636

4,907,545

1999

 

14.7153

17.1741

5,354,633

1998

 

13.1290

14.7153

4,676,853

1997

 

11.6516

13.1290

2,836,079

1996

 

10.0195

11.6516

1,170,586

1995

 

10.0000

10.0195

138,126

1994

 

 

 

 

 

Government Securities Series

16.1449

17.1070

16,078,023

2001

 

14.5981

16.1449

19,297,556

2000

 

15.0941

14.5981

23,230,411

1999

 

14.0763

15.0941

23,218,234

1998

 

13.1252

14.0763

20,508,844

1997

 

13.0981

13.1252

19,714,114

1996

 

11.2891

13.0981

18,082,586

1995

 

11.6996

11.2891

18,784,262

1994

 

10.9166

11.6996

13,661,303

1993

 

10.3731

10.9166

5,447,047

1992

 

10.0000

10.3731

256,848

1991

 

 

 

 

 

High Yield Series

17.4566

17.5162

8,578,916

2001

 

18.9861

17.4566

9,905,313

2000

 

18.0207

18.9861

12,537,119

1999

 

18.1622

18.0207

14,190,817

1998

 

16.2674

18.1622

11,699,195

1997

 

14.7137

16.2674

8,424,289

1996

 

12.7475

14.7137

6,880,080

1995

 

13.2209

12.7475

4,605,818

1994

 

11.3864

13.2209

3,599,473

1993

 

10.0378

11.3864

1,380,530

1992

 

10.0000

10.0378

6,734

1991

 

 

 

 

 

International Growth Series

11.5330

9.5659

3,066,280

2001

 

12.6829

11.5330

3,565,669

2000

 

9.5047

12.6829

3,187,799

1999

 

9.4566

9.5047

3,290,043

1998

 

9.7480

9.4566

2,390,056

1997

 

10.0000

9.7460

564,742

1996

 

 

 

 

 

International Investors Trust Series

14.6479

12.3381

3,192,419

2001

 

15.2129

14.6479

3,893,735

2000

 

13.1538

15.2129

4,509,596

1999

 

10.9674

13.1538

5,214,558

1998

 

10.4404

10.9674

4,441,911

1997

 

10.0942

10.4404

3,360,596

1996

 

10.0000

10.0942

711,179

1995

 

 

 

 

 

Managed Sectors Series

36.3635

23.1219

7,471,023

2001

 

46.5671

36.3635

9,988,070

2000

 

25.4406

46.5671

11,032,465

1999

 

22.9770

25.4406

11,245,144

1998

 

18.5452

22.9770

11,326,719

1997

 

15.9925

18.5452

10,541,726

1996

 

12.2606

15.9925

8,542,869

1995

 

12.6760

12.2606

6,351,641

1994

 

12.3521

12.6760

4,525,423

1993

 

11.7627

12.3521

2,614,510

1992

 

10.0000

11.7627

51,219

1991

 

 

 

 

 

Massachusetts Investors Growth Stock Series

14.8314

10.9842

12,892,378

2001

 

16.0186

14.8314

15,174,988

2000

 

11.9635

16.0186

11,985,320

1999

 

10.0000

11.9635

4,121,518

1998

 

 

 

 

 

Massachusetts Investors Trust Series

33.0944

27.5009

34,636,395

2001

 

33.5203

33.0944

41,704,826

2000

 

31.7109

33.5203

49,201,899

1999

 

25.9656

31.7109

51,880,765

1998

 

19.9527

25.9656

40,709,531

1997

 

16.1344

19.9527

26,199,975

1996

 

11.9036

16.1344

16,712,586

1995

 

12.2052

11.9036

10,979,711

1994

 

11.4156

12.2052

6,412,270

1993

 

10.9605

11.4156

2,557,065

1992

 

10.0000

10.9605

85,141

1991

 

 

 

 

 

Mid Cap Growth Series

9.2484

7.0055

2,551,906

2001

 

10.0000

9.2484

730,917

2000

 

 

 

 

 

Money Market Series

13.1917

13.5007

25,365,596

2001

 

12.6229

13.1917

19,204,526

2000

 

12.2282

12.6229

28,447,843

1999

 

11.8058

12.2282

29,387,086

1998

 

11.3932

11.8058

21,463,139

1997

 

11.0111

11.3932

27,275,583

1996

 

10.5878

11.0111

17,186,041

1995

 

10.3527

10.5878

14,774,386

1994

 

10.2288

10.3527

6,055,673

1993

 

10.0370

10.2288

4,101,024

1992

 

10.0000

10.0370

417,559

1991

 

 

 

 

 

New Discovery Series

16.4626

15.4039

3,696,872

2001

 

16.6274

16.4626

3,434,468

2000

 

10.5258

16.6274

1,599,416

1999

 

10.0000

10.5258

794,859

1998

 

 

 

 

 

Research Series

27.4545

21.2818

26,910,852

2001

 

29.0316

27.4545

32,640,173

2000

 

23.7119

29,0316

35,935,779

1999

 

19.4490

23.7119

38,553,986

1998

 

16.3209

19.4490

35,654,917

1997

 

13.3663

16.3209

19,577,745

1996

 

9.8615

13.3663

5,341,160

1995

 

10.0000

9.8615

392,528

1994

 

 

 

 

 

Research Growth and Income Series

14.2743

12.5421

2,455,603

2001

 

14.0374

14.2743

2,575,213

2000

 

13.1605

14.0374

3,153,242

1999

 

10.9235

13.1605

2,408,676

1998

 

10.0000

10.9235

535,928

1997

 

 

 

 

 

Research International Series

12.9474

10.5006

1,361,813

2001

 

14.2620

12.9474

1,479,722

2000

 

9.3330

14.2620

1,114,581

1999

 

10.0000

9.3330

190,267

1998

 

 

 

 

 

Strategic Growth Series

10.8282

8.0475

1,961,261

2001

 

12.1979

10.8282

2,390,144

2000

 

10.0625

12.1979

558,856

1999

 

 

 

 

 

Strategic Income Series

10.4119

10.6114

1,079,988

2001

 

12.1979

10.4119

933,731

2000

 

9.9530

12.1979

892,490

1999

 

10.0000

9.9530

622,914

1998

 

 

 

 

 

Technology Series

7.2306

4.3593

667,611

2001

 

10.0000

7.2306

427,471

2000

 

 

 

 

 

Total Return Series

25.8470

25.6185

43,095,288

2001

 

22.4371

25.8470

48,765,253

2000

 

22.1273

22.4371

62,923,966

1999

 

20.0793

22.1273

71,102,020

1998

 

16.6932

20.0793

66,303,467

1997

 

14.8406

16.6932

59,508,016

1996

 

11.8694

14.8406

53,091,748

1995

 

12.3142

11.8694

48,270,556

1994

 

11.0125

12.3142

32,979,812

1993

 

10.3042

11.0125

12,952,314

1992

 

10.0000

10.3042

280,202

1991

 

 

 

 

 

Utilities Series

30.1152

22.4771

8,022,638

2001

 

28.5407

30.1152

9,961,031

2000

 

22.0489

28.5407

9,588,408

1999

 

19.0140

22.0489

9,023,102

1998

 

14.5260

19.0140

6,101,638

1997

 

12.2403

14.5260

4,671,192

1996

 

9.3739

12.2403

3,410,047

1995

 

10.0000

9.3739

2,273,439

1994

 

10.0000

10.0000

279,796

1993

 

 

 

 

 

Value Series

14.1123

12.8745

6,112,334

2001

 

10.9848

14.1123

2,482,414

2000

 

10.4065

10.9848

1,301,166

1999

 

10.0000

10.4065

528,238

1998

 

 

 

 

 

APPENDIX C

Withdrawals, Withdrawal Charges and the Market Value Adjustment

Part 1: Variable Account (The Market Value Adjustment does not apply to the Variable Account)

Withdrawal Charge Calculation for Certificates with Date of Coverage on or After November 1, 1994 Which Contain the Cumulative Withdrawal Provision:

Full Surrender:

Assume a Purchase Payment of $40,000 is made on the Date of Coverage, no additional Purchase Payments are made and there are no partial withdrawals. The table below presents four examples of the withdrawal charge resulting from a full surrender of the Participant's Account, based on hypothetical Account Values.

Account Year

Hypothetical Account Value

Free Withdrawal Amount

Purchase Payments Liquidated

Withdrawal Charge Percentage

Withdrawal Charge Amount

1

$41,000

$ 4,000(a)

$37,000

6.00%

$2,220

3

$52,000

$12,000(b)

$40,000

5.00%

$2,000

7

$80,000

$28,000(c)

$40,000

3.00%

$1,200

9

$98,000

$68,000(d)

$40,000

0.00%

$ 0

_______________________

(a)

The free withdrawal amount during an Account Year is equal to 10% of new payments (those payments made in current Account Year or in the 6 immediately preceding Account Years) less any prior partial withdrawals in that Account Year. Any portion of the free withdrawal amount that is not used in the current Account Year is carried forward into future years. In the first Account Year 10% of new payments is $4,000. Therefore, on full surrender $4,000 is withdrawn free of the withdrawal charge and the Purchase Payment liquidated is $37,000 (Account Value less free withdrawal amount). The withdrawal charge amount is determined by applying the withdrawal charge percentage to the Purchase Payment liquidated.

(b)

In the third Account Year, the free withdrawal amount is equal to $12,000 ($4,000 for the current Account Year, plus an additional $8,000 for Account Years 1 and 2 because no partial withdrawals were taken and the unused free withdrawal amount is carried forward into future Account Years). The withdrawal charge percentage is applied to the liquidated Purchase Payment (Account Value less free withdrawal amount).

(c)

In the seventh Account Year, the free withdrawal amount is equal to $28,000 ($4,000 for the current Account Year, plus an additional $24,000 for Account Years 1 through 6, $4,000 for each Account Year because no partial withdrawals were taken and the unused free withdrawal amount is carried forward into future Account Years). The withdrawal charge percentage is applied to the liquidated Purchase Payment (Account Value less free withdrawal amount, but not greater than actual Purchase Payments).

(d)

In Account Year 9, the free withdrawal amount is $68,000, calculated as follows: There are no Annual Withdrawal Allowances for Account Years 8 or 9 because there are no New Payments in those years. The $40,000 Purchase Payment made in Account Year 1 is now an Old Payment that constitutes a portion of the free withdrawal amount. In addition, the unused Annual Withdrawal Allowances of $4,000 for each of Account Years 1 through 7 are carried forward and available for use in Account Year 9. The $98,000 full withdrawal is attributed first to the free withdrawal amount. Because the remaining $30,000 is not withdrawn from New Payments, this part of the withdrawal also will not be subject to the withdrawal charge.

Partial Withdrawal:

Assume a single Purchase Payment of $40,000 is deposited at issue, no additional Purchase Payments are made, no partial withdrawals have been taken prior to the fifth Account Year, and there are a series of 3 partial withdrawals made during the fifth Account Year of $9,000, $12,000, and $15,000.

 

Hypothetical Account Value

Partial Withdrawal Amount

Free Withdrawal Amount

Purchase Payments Liquidated

Withdrawal Charge Percentage

Withdrawal Charge Amount

(a)

$64,000

$ 9,000

$20,000

$ 0

4.00%

$ 0

(b)

$56,000

$12,000

$11,000

$ 1,000

4.00%

$ 40

(c)

$40,000

$15,000

$ 0

$15,000

4.00%

$600

_______________________

(a)

The free withdrawal amount during an Account Year is equal to 10% of New Payments (those payments made in current account year or in the 6 immediately preceding Account Years) less any prior partial withdrawals in that Account Year. Any portion of the free withdrawal amount that is not used in the current account year is carried forward into future years. In the fifth Account Year, the free withdrawal amount is equal to $20,000 ($4,000 for the current Account Year, plus an additional $16,000 for Account Years 1 through 4, $4,000 for each Account Year because no partial withdrawals were taken). The partial withdrawal amount ($9,000) is less than the free withdrawal amount so no Purchase Payments are liquidated and no withdrawal charge applies.

(b)

Since a partial withdrawal of $9,000 was taken, the remaining free withdrawal amount is equal to $11,000. The $12,000 partial withdrawal will first be applied against the $11,000 free withdrawal amount, and then will liquidate Purchase Payments of $1,000, incurring a withdrawal charge of $40.

(c)

The free withdrawal amount is zero since the previous partial withdrawals have already used the free withdrawal amount. The entire partial withdrawal amount will result in Purchase Payments being liquidated and will incur a withdrawal charge. At the beginning of the next Account Year, 10% of Purchase Payments would be available for withdrawal requests during that Account Year.

Withdrawal Charge Calculation for Certificates with Date of Coverage Before November 1, 1994 and Certificates Issued After That Date Which Do Not Contain the Cumulative Withdrawal Provision.

This example assumes that the date of the full surrender or partial withdrawal is during the 9th Account Year.

1

2

3

4

5

6

1

$1,000

$1,000

$ 0

0%

$ 0

2

1,200

1,200

0

0

0

3

1,400

1,280

120

3

3.60

4

1,600

0

1,600

4

64.00

5

1,800

0

1,800

4

72.00

6

2,000

0

2,000

5

100.00

7

2,000

0

2,000

5

100.00

8

2,000

0

2,000

6

120.00

9

2,000

0

2,000

6

120.00

 

$15,000

$3,480

$11,520

 

$579.60

Explanation of Columns in Table

Columns 1 and 2:

Represent Purchase Payments (''Payments'') and amounts of Payments. Each Payment was made on the first day of each Account Year.

Column 3:

Represents the amounts that may be withdrawn without the imposition of withdrawal charges, as

follows:

a)

Payments 1 and 2, $1,000 and $1,200, respectively, have been credited to the Certificate for more than 7 years.

 

 

b)

$1,280 of Payment 3 represents 10% of Payments that have been credited to the Certificate for less than 7 years. The 10% amount is applied to the oldest unliquidated Payment, then the next oldest and so forth.

 

Column 4:

Represents the amount of each Payment that is subject to a withdrawal charge. It is determined by subtracting the amount in Column 3 from the Payment in Column 2.

Column 5:

Represents the withdrawal charge percentages imposed on the amounts in Column 4.

Column 6:

Represents the withdrawal charge imposed on each Payment. It is determined by multiplying the amount in Column 4 by the percentage in Column 5.

For example, the withdrawal charge imposed on Payment 8

= Payment 8, Column 4 x Payment 8, Column 5

= $2,000 x 6%

= $120

Full Surrender:

The total of Column 6, $579.60, represents the total amount of withdrawal charges imposed on Payments in this example.

Partial Withdrawal:

The sum of amounts in Column 6 for as many Payments as are liquidated reflects the withdrawal charges imposed in the case of a partial withdrawal.

For example, if $7,000 of Payments (Payments 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5) were withdrawn, the amount of the withdrawal charges imposed would be the sum of amounts in Column 6 for Payments 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, which is $139.60.

Part 2-Fixed Account-Examples of the Market Value Adjustment (MVA)

The MVA factor is:

[(1 + I) / (1 + J)] ^ (N/12) -1

These examples assume the following:

1)

The Guarantee Amount was allocated to a five year Guarantee Period with a Guaranteed Interest Rate of 6% or .06 (l).

2)

The date of surrender is 2 years from the Expiration Date (N = 24).

3)

The value of the Guarantee Amount on the date of surrender is $11,910.16.

4)

The interest earned in the current Account Year is $674.16.

5)

No transfers or partial withdrawals affecting this Guarantee Amount have been made.

6)

Withdrawal charges, if any, are calculated in the same manner as shown in the examples in Part 1.

Example of a Negative MVA:

Assume that on the date of surrender, the current rate (J) is 8% or .08.

The MVA factor =

=

[(1 + I) / (1 + J + b)] ^ (N/12) -1

 

=

[(1 + .06) / (1 + .08)] ^ (24/12) -1

 

=

(.981 ^ 2) -1

 

=

.963 -1

 

=

-.037

The value of the Guarantee Amount less interest credited to the Guarantee Amount in the current Account Year is multiplied by the MVA factor to determine the MVA:

($11,910.16 - $674.16) x (-.037) = -$415.73

-$415.73 represents the MVA that will be deducted from the value of the Guarantee Amount before the deduction of any withdrawal charge.

For a partial withdrawal of $2,000 from this Guarantee Amount, the MVA would be ($2,000.00 - $674.16) x (-.037) = -$49.06. -$49.06 represents the MVA that will be deducted from the partial withdrawal amount before the deduction of any withdrawal charge.

Example of a Positive MVA:

Assume that on the date of surrender, the current rate (J) is 5% or .05.

The MVA factor

=

[(1 + I) / (1 + J + b)] ^ (N/12) -1

 

=

[(1 + .06) / (1 + .05)] ^ (24/12) -1

 

=

(1.010 ^ 2) -1

 

=

1.019 -1

 

=

.019

The value of the Guarantee Amount less interested credited to the Guarantee Amount in the current Account Year is multiplied by the MVA factor to determine the MVA:

($11,910.16 - $674.16) x .019 = $213.48

$213.48 represents the MVA that would be added to the value of the Guarantee Amount before the deduction of any withdrawal charge.

For a partial withdrawal of $2,000 from this Guarantee Amount, the MVA would be ($2,000.00 - $674.16) x .019 = $25.19.

$25.19 represents the MVA that would be added to the value of the partial withdrawal amount before the deduction of any withdrawal charge.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

                                                  SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA (U.S.)

                                                  c/o Retirement Products and Services

                                                  P.O. Box 9133

                                                  Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481

                                                  Telephone:

                                                  Toll Free (800) 752-7215

                                                  General Distributor

                                                  Clarendon Insurance Agency, Inc.

                                                  One Sun Life Executive Park

                                                  Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts 02481

                                                  Auditors

                                                  Deloitte & Touche LLP

                                                  200 Berkeley Street

                                                  Boston, Massachusetts 02116