FIDELITY MUNICIPAL TRUST
485BPOS, 1996-06-26
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM N-1A
REGISTRATION STATEMENT (No. 2-55725) 
  UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933 [X]
 Pre-Effective Amendment No.                                       
 Post-Effective Amendment No. 72          [X]
and
REGISTRATION STATEMENT (No. 811-2720) 
 UNDER THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT OF 1940    [X]
 Amendment No.  72 [X]
Fidelity Municipal Trust                         
(Exact Name of Registrant as Specified in Charter)
82 Devonshire St., Boston, Massachusetts 02109 
(Address of Principal Executive Offices)  (Zip Code)
Registrant's Telephone Number:  617-563-7000 
Arthur S. Loring, Secretary
82 Devonshire Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02109 
(Name and Address of Agent for Service)
It is proposed that this filing will become effective:
 (  ) immediately upon filing pursuant to paragraph (b)
 ( x ) on June 30, 1996 pursuant to paragraph (b) 
 (  ) 60 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(i)
 (  ) on (            ) pursuant to paragraph (a)(1)  
 (  ) 75 days after filing pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
 (  ) on (            ) pursuant to paragraph (a)(2) of rule 485.  
If appropriate, check the following box:
 (  ) this post-effective amendment designates a new effective date for a
previously filed 
      post-effective amendment.
Registrant has filed a declaration pursuant to Rule 24f-2 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 and filed the Notice required by such Rule
on February 20, 1996.
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
CLASS A & CLASS B PROSPECTUS
 
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
FORM N-1A                          
 
ITEM NUMBER   PROSPECTUS SECTION   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>   <C>    <C>                              <C>                                                   
1            ..............................   Cover Page                                            
 
2     a      ..............................   Expenses                                              
 
      b,c    ..............................   *                                                     
 
3     a      ..............................   Financial Highlights                                  
 
      b      ..............................   *                                                     
 
      c      ..............................   Performance                                           
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page                                            
 
4     a      i.............................   Charter                                               
 
             ii...........................    Investment Principles and Risks; The Fund's           
                                              Investmen Approach; Securities and Investment         
                                              Practices; Fundamental Investment Policies and        
                                              Restrictions                                          
 
      b      ..............................   Securities and Investment Practices                   
 
      c      ..............................   Who May Want to Invest; Investment Principles         
                                              and Risks; Securities and Investment Practices        
 
5     a      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      b      i.............................   Cover Page; Charter                                   
 
             ii...........................    Charter; Breakdown of Expenses                        
 
             iii..........................    Expenses; Breakdown of Expenses                       
 
      c      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page; Charter; Breakdown of Expenses            
 
      e      ..............................   Charter; Breakdown of Expenses                        
 
      f      ..............................   Expenses                                              
 
      g      ..............................   Expenses; Charter                                     
 
      5A     ..............................   *                                                     
 
6     a      i.............................   Charter                                               
 
             ii...........................    How to Buy Shares; How to Sell Shares; Investor       
                                              Services; Transaction Details; Exchange               
                                              Restrictions; Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers     
 
             iii..........................    *                                                     
 
      b      .............................    Charter                                               
 
      c      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page; Who May Want to Invest                    
 
      e      ..............................   Cover Page; How to Buy Shares; How to Sell            
                                              Shares; Investor Services; Exchange Restrictions;     
                                              Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers;                  
                                              Transactions Details                                  
 
      f, g   ..............................   Dividends, Capital Gains, and Taxes                   
 
7     a      ..............................   Cover Page; Charter; FMR & its Affiliates             
 
      b      ..............................   How to Buy Shares; Transaction Details                
 
      c      ..............................   Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers;How to Buy        
                                              Shares; Transaction Details                           
 
      d      ..............................   How to Buy Shares                                     
 
      e      ..............................   Transaction Details; Breakdown of Expenses            
 
      f      ..............................   Breakdown of Expenses; Expenses                       
 
8            ..............................   How to Sell Shares; Investor Services; Transaction    
                                              Details; Exchange Restrictions                        
 
9            ..............................   *                                                     
 
</TABLE>
 
*Not Applicable
 
 
 
Please read this prospectus before investing, and keep it on file for
future reference. It contains important information, including how the fund
invests and the services available to shareholders.
To learn more about the fund and its investments, you can obtain a copy of
the fund's most recent financial report and portfolio listing or a copy of
the Statement of Additional Information (SAI) dated June 30, 1996. The SAI
has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and is
incorporated herein by reference (legally forms a part of the prospectus).
For a free copy of either document, contact Fidelity Distributors
Corporation (FDC), 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA 02109, or your
investment professional.
 
MUTUAL FUND SHARES ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR 
OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED BY, ANY 
DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION. SHARES ARE NOT 
INSURED BY THE FDIC, FEDERAL RESERVE 
BOARD OR ANY OTHER AGENCY, AND ARE SUBJECT 
TO INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE 
LOSS OF PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED.
 
LIKE ALL MUTUAL FUNDS, THESE 
SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR 
DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND 
EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE 
SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR HAS THE 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION 
PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR 
ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY 
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A 
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
AMUN-pro-0696
Municipal Bond seeks to provide as high a level of interest income exempt
from federal income tax as is consistent with preservation of capital.
FIDELITY ADVISOR
MUNICIPAL BOND
FUND
CLASS A AND CLASS B
PROSPECTUS
JUNE 30, 1996(FIDELITY_LOGO_GRAPHIC) 82 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON, MA 02109
CONTENTS
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                <C>   <C>                                                  
KEY FACTS                                WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST                               
 
                                         EXPENSES Each class's sales charge (load) and its    
                                         yearly operating expenses.                           
 
                                         FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS A summary of the fund's         
                                         financial data.                                      
 
                                         PERFORMANCE How the fund has done over time.         
 
THE FUND IN DETAIL                       CHARTER How the fund is organized.                   
 
                                         INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS The fund's           
                                         overall approach to investing.                       
 
                                         BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES How operating costs            
                                         are calculated and what they include.                
 
YOUR ACCOUNT                             TYPES OF ACCOUNTS Different ways to set up your      
                                         account.                                             
 
                                         HOW TO BUY SHARES Opening an account and             
                                         making additional investments.                       
 
                                         HOW TO SELL SHARES Taking money out and closing      
                                         your account.                                        
 
                                         INVESTOR SERVICES Services to help you manage        
                                         your account.                                        
 
SHAREHOLDER AND ACCOUNT POLICIES         DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS, AND TAXES                  
 
                                         TRANSACTION DETAILS Share price calculations and     
                                         the timing of purchases and redemptions.             
 
                                         EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS                                
 
                                         SALES CHARGE REDUCTIONS AND WAIVERS                  
 
</TABLE>
 
KEY FACTS
 
 
WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST
Class A and Class B shares are offered to investors who engage an
investment professional for investment advice.
The fund may be appropriate for investors in higher tax brackets who seek
high current income that is free from federal income tax. The fund is
designed for investors who are interested in investment-grade quality
ratings, but who are willing to forego the highest yields in pursuit of
greater share price stability.
The value of the fund's investments and the income they generate vary from
day to day, and generally reflect changes in interest rates, market
conditions, and other political and economic news.
The fund is not in itself a balanced investment plan. You should consider
your investment objective and tolerance for risk when making an investment
decision. When you sell your fund shares, they may be worth more or less
than what you paid for them.
The fund is composed of multiple classes of shares.    All classes of the
fund have     a common investment objective and investment portfolio. Class
A shares have a front-end sales charge, or may be subject to a contingent
deferred sales charge (CDSC), and pay a distribution fee. Class B shares do
not have a front-end sales charge, but do have a CDSC, and pay a
distribution fee and a shareholder service fee. Institutional Class shares
have no sales charge, and do not pay a distribution fee or a shareholder
service fee, but are    only     available to certain types of investors.
See "Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers," page , for Institutional Class
eligibility information. You may obtain more information about
Institutional Class shares, which are not offered through this prospectus,
by calling 1-800-843-3001 or from your investment professional. Contact
your investment professional to discuss which class is appropriate for you.
EXPENSES
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES are charges you pay when you buy, sell,
exchange, or hold shares of the fund. Lower front-end sales charges may be
available with purchases of $50,000 or more. See "Transaction Details,"
page , for an explanation of how and when these charges apply.
A CDSC is imposed on Class B shares only if you redeem Class B shares
within five years of purchase. See "Transaction Details," page , for
information about the CDSC.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                <C>              <C>              
                                                   Class A          Class B          
 
Maximum sales charge (as a % of offering price)    3.50             None             
 
Maximum CDSC (as a % of the lesser of              None   [A]       4.00%   [B       
original purchase price or redemption proceeds)                        ]             
 
Maximum sales charge on reinvested distributions   None             None             
 
Redemption fee                                     None             None             
 
Exchange fee                                       None             None             
 
Annual account maintenance fee                     $12.0            $12.0            
(for accounts under $2,500)                        0                0                
 
</TABLE>
 
   [A] A CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE OF 0.25% IS ASSESSED ON CERTAIN
REDEMPTIONS OF CLASS A SHARES THAT WERE PURCHASED WITHOUT AN INITIAL SALES
CHARGE. SEE "TRANSACTION DETAILS."
[B]     DECLINES OVER 5 YEARS FROM 4.00% TO 0%.
ANNUAL OPERATING EXPENSES are paid out of the fund's assets. The fund pays
a management fee to Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR). It also
incurs other expenses for services such as maintaining shareholder records
and furnishing shareholder statements and financial reports.
12b-1 fees for Class A and Class B include a distribution fee and, for
Class B, a shareholder service fee. Distribution fees are paid by each
class to Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) for services and expenses
in connection with the distribution of the applicable class's shares.
Shareholder service fees are paid by Class B to investment professionals
for services and expenses incurred in connection with providing personal
service and/or maintenance of Class B shareholder accounts. Long-term
shareholders may pay more than the economic equivalent of the maximum sales
charges permitted by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.,
due to 12b-1 fees.
Each class's expenses are factored into its share price or dividends and
are not charged directly to shareholder accounts (see "Breakdown of
Expenses" on page ).
The following are projections based on estimated expenses of Class A and
Class B, and are calculated as a percentage of average net assets of the
applicable class of the fund.
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                      <C>            <C>   <C>            
                                                                         Class                Class    
                                                                         A                    B        
Management fee                                                           0.40                 0.40           
                                                                         %                    %              
 
12b-1 fee (including 0.25% Shareholder Service Fee for Class B shares)   0.25                 0.90           
                                                                         %                    %              
 
Other expenses (after reimbursement)                                        0.35    %            0.35    %   
                                                                         [A]                  [A]            
 
Total operating expenses (after reimbursement)                              1.00                 1.65        
                                                                                %                    %       
 
</TABLE>
 
[A] PROJECTIONS BASED ON ESTIMATED EXPENSES FOR FIRST YEAR.
EXPENSE TABLE EXAMPLE: You would pay the following expenses, including the
maximum front-end sales charge or CDSC, as applicable, on a $1,000
investment, assuming a 5% annual return and either (1) full redemption or
(2) no redemption at the end of each time period:
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>    <C>             <C>           <C>             <C>           <C>            <C>           <C>            <C>            
       1 Year                        3 Years                       5 Years                      10 Years   
       (1)             (2)           (1)             (2)           (1)            (2)           (1)            (2)            
 
Clas   $    45         $ 45          $    66         $ 66          $    88        $ 88          $    153       $ 153          
s A                                                                                                                           
 
Clas   $    57    [A   $    17       $    82    [A   $    52       $    100       $    90       $    162       $    162       
s B    ]                             ]                                    [A]                      [B]            [B]         
 
</TABLE>
 
[A] REFLECTS DEDUCTION OF APPLICABLE CDSC.
[B] REFLECTS CONVERSION TO CLASS A SHARES AFTER SIX YEARS.
THESE EXAMPLES ILLUSTRATE THE EFFECT OF EXPENSES, BUT ARE NOT MEANT TO
SUGGEST ACTUAL OR EXPECTED COSTS OR RETURNS, ALL OF WHICH MAY VARY.
FMR has voluntarily agreed to reimburse Class A and Class B of Municipal
Bond Fund to the extent that total operating expenses, as a percentage of
their respective average net assets exceed the following rates: 
      Class    Effectiv   Class B   Effectiv   
      A        e                    e          
               Date                 Date       
 
Muni Bond    1.00%   7/1/96    1.65%   7/1/96   
 
If these agreements were not in effect, other expenses and total operating
expenses as a percentage of the applicable Class's average net assets would
have been the following amounts:
      Other      Total              
      Expenses   Operating          
                 Expenses           
 
Class A[A]    0.37   %        1.02   %       
 
Class B[A]    0.52   %        1.82   %       
 
[A]    PROJECTIONS ARE BASED ON ESTIMATED EXPENSES FOR FIRST YEAR.     
Interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, or extraordinary expenses are not
included in these expense limitations.
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
The financial highlights table that follows and the fund's financial
statements are included in the fund's Annual Report and have been audited
by    Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.    , independent accountants. Their report
on the financial statements and financial highlights is included in the
Annual Report. The financial statements, the financial highlights, and the
report are incorporated by reference into the fund's SAI, which may be
obtained free of charge from FDC or your investment professional.
   Class A and Class B are expected to commence operations on or about July
1, 1996.
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND A    
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>        <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>        
    1.Selected Per-Share Data 
 and Ratios                                                           
 
 2.Years ended 
December 31 1995        1994         1993B       1992        1991        1990        1989        1988        1987        1986       
 
 3.Net asset 
value,      $ 7.370     $ 8.690      $ 8.500     $ 8.470     $ 8.130     $ 8.130     $ 7.950     $ 7.600     $ 8.280     $ 7.420    
 beginning of period                                                 
 
 4.Income from 
Investment   .408        .455         .487        .519        .526        .541        .556        .558        .548        .553      
 Operations
  Net interest income                                                 
 
 5. Net realized 
and          .904        (1.180)      .600        .210        .410        --          .180        .350        (.680)      .860      
 unrealized gain (loss)                                               
 
 6. Total from 
investment   1.312       (.725)       1.087       .729        .936        .541        .736        .908        (.132)      1.413     
 operations                                                           
 
 7.Less 
Distributions (.408)    (.455)       (.487)      (.519)      (.526)      (.541)      (.556)      (.558)      (.548)      (.553)    
  From net interest income                                            
 
 8. From net realized 
gain         --          (.010)       (.410)      (.180)      (.070)      --          --          --          --          --        
 
 9. In excess of 
net         (.004)      (.130)       --          --          --          --          --          --          --          --        
 realized gain                                                        
 
 10. Total 
distributions (.412)    (.595)       (.897)      (.699)      (.596)      (.541)      (.556)      (.558)      (.548)      (.553)    
 
 11.Net asset value, 
end of      $ 8.270     $ 7.370      $ 8.690     $ 8.500     $ 8.470     $ 8.130     $ 8.130     $ 7.950     $ 7.600     $ 8.280    
 period                                                               
 
 12.Total 
return       18.15       (8.49)       13.17       8.93        11.91       6.91        9.56        12.30       (1.56)      19.54     
             %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %        
 
 13.Net assets, 
end of      $ 1,082     $ 1,005      $ 1,262     $ 1,192     $ 1,163     $ 1,070     $ 1,054     $ 984       $ 903       $ 1,141    
 period (In millions)                                                 
 
 14.Ratio of expenses 
to           .57         .53          .49         .49         .50         .50         .50         .51         .57         .51       
 average net 
assets      %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %          
 
 15.Ratio of net 
interest    5.14        5.68         5.51        6.11        6.35        6.71        6.90        7.11        7.03        6.90      
 income to 
average     %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %          
 net assets                                                           
 
 16.Portfolio turnover 
rate         72          95           74          53          33          49          64          46          72          72        
            %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %          
    
 
</TABLE>
 
   A THE FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS, THE ORIGINAL
CLASS OF THE FUND.
B EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1993, THE FUND ADOPTED STATEMENT OF POSITION 93-2,
"DETERMINATION, DISCLOSURE, AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT PRESENTATION OF INCOME,
CAPITAL GAIN, AND RETURN OF CAPITAL DISTRIBUTIONS BY INVESTMENT COMPANIES."
AS A RESULT, NET INTEREST INCOME PER SHARE MAY REFLECT CERTAIN
RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO TAX DIFFERENCES.    
PERFORMANCE
Bond fund performance can be measured as TOTAL RETURN or YIELD. The total
returns that follow are based on historical fund results.
The fund's fiscal year runs from January 1 through December 31. The tables
   below     show each class's performance over past fiscal years. The
charts on page  present calendar year performance.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS[A]
Fiscal years ended    Past    Past 5   Past    
December 31, 1995     1       years    10      
                      year             years   
 
Municipal Bond - Class A     18.15           8.33           8.73          
                            %               %              %              
 
Municipal Bond - Class A        14.02           7.56           8.34       
(load adj.)[B]                     %               %              %       
 
Municipal Bond - Class B     18.15           8.33           8.73          
                            %               %              %              
 
Municipal Bond - Class B        15.15           8.33           8.73       
(load adj.)[B]                     %               %              %       
 
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS[A]
Fiscal years ended   Past    Past 5   Past    
December 31, 1995    1       years    10      
                     year             years   
 
Municipal Bond - Class A     18.15           49.17           130.90          
                            %               %               %                
 
Municipal Bond - Class A        14.02           43.94           122.82       
(load adj.)[B]                     %               %               %         
 
Municipal Bond - Class B     18.15           49.17           130.90          
                            %               %               %                
 
Municipal Bond - Class B        15.15           49.17           130.90       
(load adj.)[B]                     %               %               %         
 
[A] INITIAL OFFERING OF CLASS A SHARES TOOK PLACE ON JULY    1,     1996.
CLASS A SHARES BEAR A 12B-1 FEE, WHICH IS NOT REFLECTED IN PRIOR DATE
RETURNS. RETURNS PRIOR TO JULY    1,     1996 ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS,
THE ORIGINAL CLASS OF THE FUND, WHICH CLASS DOES NOT BEAR A 12B-1 FEE.
CLASS A SHARE RETURNS WOULD HAVE BEEN LOWER HAD ITS 12B-1 FEE BEEN
REFLECTED IN PRIOR DATE RETURNS.
INITIAL OFFERING OF CLASS B SHARES TOOK PLACE ON JULY    1,    1996. CLASS
B SHARES BEAR A 12B-1 FEE (INCLUDING A SHAREHOLDER SERVICING FEE), WHICH IS
NOT REFLECTED IN PRIOR DATE RETURNS. RETURNS PRIOR TO JULY    1,     1996
ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS, THE ORIGINAL CLASS OF THE FUND, WHICH CLASS
DOES NOT BEAR A 12B-1 FEE. CLASS B SHARE RETURNS  WOULD HAVE BEEN LOWER HAD
ITS 12B-1 FEE BEEN REFLECTED IN PRIOR DATE RETURNS.
[B] LOAD ADJUSTED RETURNS FOR CLASS A SHARES INCLUDE THE EFFECT OF PAYING
CLASS A'S MAXIMUM 3.50% FRONT-END SALES CHARGE.
LOAD ADJUSTED RETURNS  FOR CLASS B SHARES REFLECT CDSCS FOR THE PERIODS OF:
LESS THAN ONE YEAR, 4%; ONE YEAR TO LESS THAN TWO YEARS, 3%; TWO YEARS TO
LESS THAN THREE YEARS, 3%; THREE YEARS TO LESS THAN FOUR YEARS, 2%; FOUR
YEARS TO LESS THAN FIVE  YEARS, 1%; AND  FIVE YEARS AND GREATER, 0%.
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS A
    
    
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>         <C>       <C>      <C>     <C>    <C>    <C>          <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>   
Calendar year total 
returns+    1995      1994     1993    1992   1991   1990         1989           1988           1987           1986                 
 
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS 
A              18.15   -8.49   13.17   8.93   11.91   6.91    %      9.56    %      12.30          -1.56          19.54             
               %       %       %       %      %                                      %                 %              %             
 
Lipper Gen. Muni. Debt 
Funds          16.84   -6.50   12.47   8.79   12.09   6.05    %      9.65           11.53          -0.94          18.74             
Avg.           %       %       %       %      %                       %              %                 %              %             
 
Consumer Price 
Index          2.54    2.67    2.75    2.90   3.06    6.11    %      4.65           4.42           4.43           1.10    %         
               %       %       %       %      %                       %                 %              %                            
 
</TABLE>
 
 
Percentage (%)
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 18.15
Row: 2, Col: 1, Value: -8.49
Row: 3, Col: 1, Value: 13.17
Row: 4, Col: 1, Value: 8.93
Row: 5, Col: 1, Value: 11.91
Row: 6, Col: 1, Value: 6.91
Row: 7, Col: 1, Value: 9.56
Row: 8, Col: 1, Value: 12.3
Row: 9, Col: 1, Value: -1.56
Row: 10, Col: 1, Value: 19.54
(LARGE SOLID BOX) MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - 
CLASS A
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS B
    
    
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>       <C>       <C>      <C>     <C>    <C>     <C>        <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>     
Calendar year total 
returns+  1995       1994    1993    1992   1991    1990        1989           1988           1987           1986                 
 
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - 
CLASS B      18.15   -8.49   13.17   8.93   11.91   6.91    %      9.56    %      12.30          -1.56          19.54             
             %       %       %       %      %                                      %                 %              %             
 
Lipper Gen. Muni. Debt 
Funds       16.84   -6.50   12.47   8.79    12.09   6.05    %      9.65           11.53          -0.94          18.74             
Avg.        %       %       %       %       %                       %                 %              %              %             
 
Consumer Price 
Index       2.54    2.67    2.75    2.90   3.06     6.11    %      4.65           4.42           4.43           1.10    %         
            %       %       %       %      %                        %                 %              %                            
 
</TABLE>
 
 
Percentage (%)
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 18.15
Row: 2, Col: 1, Value: -8.49
Row: 3, Col: 1, Value: 13.17
Row: 4, Col: 1, Value: 8.93
Row: 5, Col: 1, Value: 11.91
Row: 6, Col: 1, Value: 6.91
Row: 7, Col: 1, Value: 9.56
Row: 8, Col: 1, Value: 12.3
Row: 9, Col: 1, Value: -1.56
Row: 10, Col: 1, Value: 19.54
(LARGE SOLID BOX) MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - 
CLASS B
+ RETURNS DO NOT INCLUDE THE EFFECT OF PAYING CLASS A'S MAXIMUM FRONT-END
SALES CHARGE OR CLASS B'S APPLICABLE    CDSC.    
INITIAL OFFERING OF CLASS A SHARES TOOK PLACE ON JULY    1,     1996. CLASS
A SHARES BEAR A 12B-1 FEE, WHICH IS NOT REFLECTED IN PRIOR DATE RETURNS.
RETURNS PRIOR TO JULY    1,     1996 ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS, THE
ORIGINAL CLASS OF THE FUND, WHICH CLASS DOES NOT BEAR A 12B-1 FEE. CLASS A
SHARE RETURNS WOULD HAVE BEEN LOWER HAD ITS 12B-1 FEE BEEN REFLECTED IN
PRIOR DATE RETURNS.
INITIAL OFFERING OF CLASS B SHARES TOOK PLACE ON JULY    1    , 1996. CLASS
B SHARES BEAR A 12B-1 FEE (INCLUDING A SHAREHOLDER SERVICING FEE), WHICH IS
NOT REFLECTED IN PRIOR DATE RETURNS. RETURNS  PRIOR TO JULY    1    , 1996
ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS, THE ORIGINAL CLASS OF THE FUND, WHICH CLASS
DOES NOT BEAR A 12B-1 FEE. CLASS B SHARE RETURNS WOULD HAVE BEEN LOWER HAD
ITS 12B-1 FEE BEEN REFLECTED IN PRIOR DATE RETURNS.
The exclusion of any applicable sales charge from a performance calculation
produces a higher return.
EXPLANATION OF TERMS
TOTAL RETURN is the change in value of an investment in the fund over a
given period, assuming reinvestment of any dividends and capital gains. A
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN reflects actual performance over a stated period of
time. An AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN is a hypothetical rate of return that,
if achieved annually, would have produced the same cumulative total return
if performance had been constant over the entire period. Average annual
total returns smooth out variations in performance; they are not the same
as actual year-by-year results.
Average annual and cumulative total returns usually will include the effect
of paying the maximum applicable sales charge.
YIELD refers to the income generated by an investment in the fund over a
given period of time, expressed as an annual percentage rate. Yields are
calculated according to a standard that is required for all stock and bond
funds. Because this differs from other accounting methods, the quoted yield
may not equal the income actually paid to shareholders.
A TAX-EQUIVALENT YIELD shows what an investor would have to earn before
taxes to equal a tax-free yield.
THE COMPETITIVE FUNDS AVERAGE is the Lipper General Municipal Debt Funds
Average, which currently reflects the performance of over    225     mutual
funds with similar objectives.  This average, which assumes reinvestment of
distributions, is published by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.
THE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX is a widely recognized measure of inflation
calculated by the U.S. government.
The fund's recent strategies, performance, and holdings are detailed twice
a year in financial reports, which are sent to all shareholders.    For
current performance or a free annual report, please contact your investment
professional.    
TOTAL RETURNS AND YIELDS ARE BASED ON PAST RESULTS AND ARE NOT AN
INDICATION OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
THE FUND IN DETAIL
 
 
CHARTER
MUNICIPAL BOND IS A MUTUAL FUND: an investment that pools shareholders'
money and invests it toward a specified goal. The fund is a diversified
fund of Fidelity Municipal Trust, an open-end management investment company
organized as a Massachusetts business trust on June 22, 1984.
THE FUND IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF TRUSTEES which is responsible for
protecting the interests of shareholders. The trustees are experienced
executives who meet throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities,
review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the
fund, and review the fund's performance. The majority of trustees are not
otherwise affiliated with Fidelity.
THE FUND MAY HOLD SPECIAL MEETINGS AND MAIL PROXY MATERIALS. These meetings
may be called to elect or remove trustees, change fundamental policies,
approve a management contract, or for other purposes. Shareholders not
attending these meetings are encouraged to vote by proxy. The transfer
agent will mail proxy materials in advance, including a voting card and
information about the proposals to be voted on. The number of votes you are
entitled to is based upon the dollar value of your investment.
Separate votes are taken by each class of shares, fund, or trust, if a
matter affects just that class of shares, fund, or trust, respectively.
FMR AND ITS AFFILIATES
Fidelity Investments is one of the largest investment management
organizations in the United States and has its principal business address
at 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109. It includes a number
of different subsidiaries and divisions which provide a variety of
financial services and products. The fund employs various Fidelity
companies to perform activities required for its operation.
The fund is managed by FMR, which chooses the fund's investments and
handles its business affairs.
As of    April 30, 1996,     FMR advised funds having approximately
   26     million shareholder accounts with a total value of more than
$   386     billion.
George Fischer is manager of Municipal Bond, which he has managed since
October 1995. He also manages Spartan Bond Strategist, Insured Municipal
Income, and various trust accounts. Mr. Fischer joined Fidelity in 1989.
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions.
FDC distributes and markets Fidelity's funds and services. Fidelity
Investments Institutional Operations Company (FIIOC) performs transfer
agent servicing functions for Class A and Class B shares of the fund.
FMR Corp. is the ultimate parent company of FMR. Members of the Edward C.
Johnson 3d family are the predominant owners of a class of shares of common
stock representing approximately 49% of the voting power of FMR Corp. Under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act), control of a company is
presumed where one individual or group of individuals owns more than 25% of
the voting stock of that company; therefore, the Johnson family may be
deemed under the 1940 Act to form a controlling group with respect to FMR
Corp.
UMB Bank, n.a. (UMB) is the fund's transfer agent, although it employs
FIIOC to perform these functions for Class A and Class B of the fund. UMB
is located at 1010 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64106.
To carry out the fund's transactions, FMR may use its broker-dealer
affiliates and other firms that sell fund shares, provided that the fund
receives services and commission rates comparable to those of other
broker-dealers.
INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS
THE FUND'S INVESTMENT APPROACH
The fund seeks as high a level of federally tax-free income as is
consistent with preservation of capital by investing primarily in
investment   -    grade municipal bonds. The fund normally invests at least
80% of its assets in municipal securities whose interest is free from
federal income tax. The fund may, under normal conditions, invest up to
100% of its assets in municipal securities subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax. 
   Although the fund can invest in securities of any maturity, FMR seeks to
manage the fund so that it generally reacts to changes in interest rates
similarly to municipal bonds with maturities between 8 and 18 years. As of
the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, the fund's dollar-weighted average
maturity was approximately 13 years.    
The total return from a bond is a combination of income and price gains or
losses. While income is the most important component of bond returns over
time, the fund's emphasis on income does not mean that the fund invests
only in the highest-yielding bonds available, or that it can avoid risks to
principal. In selecting investments for the fund, FMR considers a bond's
income potential together with its potential for price gains or losses. FMR
focuses on assembling a portfolio of income-producing securities that it
believes will provide the best tradeoff between risk and return within the
range of securities that are eligible investments for the fund.
The fund's yield and share price change daily and are based on changes in
interest rates, market conditions, other economic and political news, and
on the quality and maturity of its investments. In general, bond prices
rise when interest rates fall, and vice versa. This effect is usually more
pronounced for longer-term securities. FMR may use various investment
techniques to hedge a portion of the fund's risk, but there is no guarantee
that these strategies will work as intended. When you sell your shares,
they may be worth more or less than what you paid for them.
If you are subject to the federal alternative minimum tax, you should note
that the fund may invest all of its assets in municipal securities issued
to finance private activities. The interest from these investments is a
tax-preference item for purposes of the tax.
FMR normally invests the fund's assets according to its investment strategy
and does not expect to invest in federally taxable obligations. The fund
also reserves the right to invest without limitation in short-term
instruments, to hold a substantial amount of uninvested cash, or to invest
more than normally permitted in federally taxable obligations for
temporary, defensive purposes.
SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT PRACTICES
The following pages contain more detailed information about types of
instruments in which the fund may invest, strategies FMR may employ in
pursuit of the fund's investment objective, and a summary of related risks.
Any restrictions listed supplement those discussed earlier in this section.
A complete listing of the fund's limitations and more detailed information
about the fund's investments are contained in the fund's SAI. Policies and
limitations are considered at the time of purchase; the sale of instruments
is not required in the event of a subsequent change in circumstances.
FMR may not buy all of these instruments or use all of these techniques
unless it believes that they are consistent with the fund's investment
objective and policies and that doing so will help the fund achieve its
goal.    Fund     holdings and recent investment strategies are
   detailed     in the fund's financial reports, which are sent to
shareholders twice a year. For a free SAI or financial report,    call    
your investment professional.
DEBT SECURITIES. Bonds and other debt instruments are used by issuers to
borrow money from investors. The issuer pays the investor a fixed or
variable rate of interest, and must repay the amount borrowed at maturity.
Some debt securities, such as zero coupon bonds, do not pay current
interest, but are purchased at a discount from their face values. In
general, bond prices rise when interest rates fall, and vice versa. Debt
securities have varying degrees of quality and varying levels of
sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Longer-term bonds are generally
more sensitive to interest rate changes than short-term bonds.
Investment-grade debt securities are medium- and high-quality securities.
Some, however, may possess speculative characteristics and may be more
sensitive to economic changes and to changes in the financial condition of
issuers.
RESTRICTIONS:    The fund invests only in investment-grade securities. A
security is considered to be investment-grade if it is judged by FMR to be
of equivalent quality to securities rated Baa or BBB or higher by Moody's
Investor Service (Moody's) or Standard & Poor's (S&P), respectively.
However, the fund will limit its investments in medium quality securities,
as judged by FMR, to one-third of its total assets; will not purchase
securities rated below Baa or BBB by Moody's or S&P, respectively; and will
not invest more than 20% of its total assets in securities not rated by
Moody's and S&P.    
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES are issued to raise money for a variety of public
purposes, including general financing for state and local governments, or
financing for specific projects or public facilities. They may be issued in
anticipation of future revenues, and may be backed by the full taxing power
of a municipality, the revenues from a specific project, or the credit of a
private organization. The value of some or all municipal securities may be
affected by uncertainties in the municipal market related to legislation or
litigation involving the taxation of municipal securities or the rights of
municipal securities holders. The fund may own a municipal security
directly or through a participation interest.
CREDIT SUPPORT. Issuers may employ various forms of credit enhancement,
including letters of credit, guarantees, or insurance from a bank,
insurance company, or other entity. These arrangements expose the fund to
the credit risk of the entity. In the case of foreign entities, extensive
public information about the entity may not be available and the entity may
be subject to unfavorable political, economic, or governmental developments
which might affect its ability to honor its commitment.
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES include interests in pools of purchase contracts,
financing leases, or sales agreements entered into by municipalities. These
securities usually rely on continued payments by a municipality, and may
also be subject to prepayment risk.
VARIABLE AND FLOATING RATE SECURITIES have interest rates that are
periodically adjusted either at specific intervals or whenever a benchmark
rate changes. Inverse floaters have interest rates that move in the
opposite direction from a benchmark, making the security's market value
more volatile.
MUNICIPAL LEASE OBLIGATIONS are used by municipalities to acquire land,
equipment, or facilities. If the municipality stops making payments or
transfers its obligations to a private entity, the obligation could lose
value or become taxable.
OTHER MUNICIPAL SECURITIES may include obligations of U.S. territories and
possessions such as Guam, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico, and their
political subdivisions and public corporations.
PUT FEATURES entitle the holder to put (sell back) an instrument to the
issuer or a financial intermediary. In exchange for this benefit, the fund
may pay periodic fees or accept a lower interest rate. Demand features and
standby commitments are types of put features.
PRIVATE ENTITIES may be involved in some municipal securities. For example,
industrial revenue bonds are backed by private entities, and resource
recovery bonds often involve private corporations. The viability of a
project or tax incentives could affect the value and credit quality of
these securities.
ADJUSTING INVESTMENT EXPOSURE. The fund can use various techniques to
increase or decrease its exposure to changing security prices, interest
rates,    commodity prices,     or other factors that affect security
values. These techniques may involve derivative transactions such as buying
and selling options and futures contracts, and purchasing indexed
securities.
FMR can use these practices to adjust the risk and return characteristics
of the fund's portfolio of investments. If FMR judges market conditions
incorrectly or employs a strategy that does not correlate well with the
fund's investments, these techniques could result in a loss, regardless of
whether the intent was to reduce risk or increase return. These techniques
may increase the volatility of the fund and may involve a small investment
of cash relative to the magnitude of the risk assumed. In addition, these
techniques could result in a loss if the counterparty to the transaction
does not perform as promised.
ILLIQUID AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES. Some investments may be determined by
FMR, under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, to be illiquid, which
means that they may be difficult to sell promptly at an acceptable price.
The sale of some illiquid securities, and some other securities, may be
subject to legal restrictions. Difficulty in selling securities may result
in a loss or may be costly to the fund.
RESTRICTIONS   :     The fund may not purchase a security if, as a result,
more than 10% of its assets would be invested in illiquid securities. 
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED-DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS are trading practices in
which payment and delivery for the securities take place at a future date.
The market value of a security could change during this period.
DIVERSIFICATION. Diversifying a fund's investment portfolio can reduce the
risks of investing. This may include limiting the amount of money invested
in any one issuer or, on a broader scale, in any one industry or type of
project. Economic, business, or political changes can affect all securities
of a similar type.
RESTRICTIONS: With respect to 75% of its total assets, the fund may not
purchase a security if, as a result, more than 5% would be invested in the
securities of any one issuer. This limitation does not apply to U.S.
Government securities. The fund may invest more than 25% of its total
assets in tax-free securities that finance similar types of projects.
BORROWING. The fund may borrow from banks or from other funds advised by
FMR, or through reverse repurchase agreements. If the fund borrows money,
its share price may be subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing
is paid off. If the fund makes additional investments while borrowings are
outstanding, this may be considered a form of leverage.
RESTRICTIONS: The fund may borrow only for temporary or emergency purposes,
but not in an amount exceeding 331/3% of its total assets.
FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS
Some of the policies and restrictions discussed on the preceding pages are
fundamental, that is, subject to change only by shareholder approval. The
following paragraph   s     restate all those that are fundamental. All
policies stated throughout this prospectus, other than those identified in
the following paragraph   s    , can be changed without shareholder
approval. 
The fund seeks to provide as high a level of interest income exempt from
federal income tax as is consistent with preservation of capital.
The fund invests in a diversified portfolio of municipal bonds. The fund
will invest primarily in municipal bonds judged by FMR to be of high   
    grade or upper        medium        grade quality, although it may
invest up to one-third of its total assets in bonds judged to be of
medium        grade quality if they are suitable for achieving its
investment objective. The fund's standards for high        grade, upper
medium grade, and medium        grade obligations are essentially the same
as Moody's and S&P's four highest categories of Baa or BBB and above. The
fund will not invest in any bond rated lower than Baa by Moody's or BBB by
S&P, but may invest up to 20% of its total assets in bonds not rated by
either of these rating services if FMR judges them to meet the fund's
quality standards. The fund will normally invest at least 80% of its assets
in municipal securities whose interest is exempt from federal income tax.
With respect to 75% of its total assets, the fund may not purchase a
security if, as a result, more than 5% would be invested in the securities
of any one issuer.
The fund may borrow only for temporary or emergency purposes, but not in an
amount exceeding 331/3% of its total assets.
BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES
Like all mutual funds, the fund pays fees related to its daily operations.
Expenses paid out of each class's assets are reflected in that class's
share price or dividends; they are neither billed directly to shareholders
nor deducted from shareholder accounts.
The fund pays a MANAGEMENT FEE to FMR for managing its investments and
business affairs. The fund also pays OTHER EXPENSES, which are explained
   on the following page    .
FMR may, from time to time, agree to reimburse the fund for management fees
and other expenses above a specified limit. FMR retains the ability to be
repaid by the fund if expenses fall below the specified limit prior to the
end of the fiscal year. Reimbursement arrangements, which may be terminated
at any time without notice, can decrease the fund's expenses and boost its
performance.
MANAGEMENT FEE
The management fee is calculated and paid to FMR every month. The fee is
calculated by adding a group fee rate to an individual fund fee rate, and
multiplying the result by the fund's average net assets.
The group fee rate is based on the average net assets of all the mutual
funds advised by FMR. This rate cannot rise above 0.37%, and it drops as
total assets under management increase.
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, the group fee rate was
0.1482%. The individual fund fee rate is 0.25%. The total management fee
rate for the fiscal year ended 1995 was 0.40%.
OTHER EXPENSES
While the management fee is a significant component of the fund's annual
operating costs, the fund has other expenses as well.
UMB has entered into a sub-arrangement with FIIOC. FIIOC performs transfer
agency, dividend disbursing and shareholder services for Class A and Class
B shares of the fund. UMB has also entered into a sub-arrangement with FSC.
FSC calculates the NAV and dividends for Class A and Class B shares of the
fund, and maintains the fund's general accounting records. All of the fees
are paid to FIIOC and FSC by UMB, which is reimbursed by the applicable
class or the fund, as appropriate, for such payments.
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, UMB paid FSC fees equal to
0.   03    % of the fund's average net assets for pricing and bookkeeping
services.
Class A shares have adopted a DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN. Under the
Class A Plan, Class A is authorized to pay FDC a monthly distribution fee
as compensation for its services and expenses in connection with the
distribution of Class A shares. Class A may pay FDC a distribution fee at
an annual rate of up to 0.40% of its average net assets, or such lesser
amount as the Trustees may determine from time to time. Class A currently
pays FDC monthly at an annual rate of 0.25% of its average net assets
throughout the month. The Class A distribution fee rate may be increased
only when the Trustees believe that it is in the best interest of Class A
shareholders to do so.
Up to the full amount of the Class A distribution fee may be reallowed to
investment professionals, as compensation for their services in connection
with the distribution of Class A shares and for providing support services
to Class A shareholders, based upon the level of such services provided.
These services may include, without limitation, answering investor
inquiries regarding the funds; providing assistance to investors in
changing dividend options, account designations, and addresses; performing
subaccounting and maintaining Class A shareholder accounts; processing
purchase and redemption transactions, including automatic investment and
redemption of investor account balances; providing periodic statements
showing an investor's account balance and integrating other transactions
into such statements; and performing other administrative services in
support of the shareholder.
Class B shares have also adopted a DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN. Under the
Class B Plan, Class B is authorized to pay FDC a monthly distribution fee
as compensation for its services and expenses in connection with the
distribution of Class B shares. Class B may pay FDC a distribution fee at
an annual rate of up to 0.75% of its average net assets, or such lesser
amount as the Trustees may determine from time to time. Class B currently
pays FDC monthly at an annual rate of 0.65% of its average net assets
throughout the month. The Class B distribution fee rate may be increased
only when the Trustees believe that it is in the best interest of Class B
shareholders to do so.
In addition, pursuant to the Class B Plan, investment professionals are
compensated at an annual rate of 0.25% of Class B's average net assets
throughout the month for providing personal service to and/or maintenance
of Class B shareholder accounts.
The Plans specifically recognize that FMR may make payments from its
management fee revenue, past profits, or other resources to reimburse FDC
for expenses incurred in connection with the distribution of the applicable
class's shares including payments made to investment professionals that
provide shareholder support services or engage in the sale of the
applicable class's shares. The Board of Trustees of the fund has authorized
such payments.
The fund also pays other expenses, such as legal, audit, and custodian
fees; in some instances, proxy solicitation costs; and the compensation of
trustees who are not affiliated with Fidelity.
The fund's portfolio turnover rate for the fiscal year ended 1995 was 72%.
This rate varies from year to year.
   YOUR ACCOUNT    
 
 
TYPES OF ACCOUNTS
When you invest through an investment professional, your investment
professional, including a broker-dealer or financial institution, may
charge you a transaction fee with respect to the purchase and sale of fund
shares. Read your investment professional's program materials in
conjunction with this prospectus for additional service features or fees
that may apply. Certain features of the fund, such as minimum initial or
subsequent investment amounts, may be modified.
The different ways to set up (register) your account with Fidelity are
listed below.
WAYS TO SET UP YOUR ACCOUNT
INDIVIDUAL OR JOINT TENANT
FOR YOUR GENERAL INVESTMENT NEEDS 
Individual accounts are owned by one person. Joint accounts can have two or
more owners (tenants).
GIFTS OR TRANSFERS TO A MINOR (UGMA, UTMA) 
TO INVEST FOR A CHILD'S EDUCATION OR OTHER FUTURE NEEDS 
These custodial accounts provide a way to give money to a child and obtain
tax benefits. An individual can give up to $10,000 a year per child without
paying federal gift tax. Depending on state laws, you can set up a
custodial account under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA) or the
Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA). Contact your investment
professional.
TRUST 
FOR MONEY BEING INVESTED BY A TRUST 
The trust must be established before an account can be opened.
BUSINESS OR ORGANIZATION 
FOR INVESTMENT NEEDS OF CORPORATIONS, ASSOCIATIONS, PARTNERSHIPS, OR OTHER
GROUPS
Contact your investment professional.
HOW TO BUY SHARES
Once each business day, two share prices are calculated for Class A shares
of the fund: the offering price and the NAV. If you qualify for a front-end
sales charge waiver as described on page , your Class A share price will be
the NAV. If you pay a front-end sales charge as described on page , your
Class A share price will be the offering price. When you buy Class A shares
at the offering price, the transfer agent deducts the appropriate sales
charge and invests the rest in Class A shares of the fund. Class B's NAV is
also calculated every business day. Class B shares of the fund are sold
without a front-end sales charge and may be subject to a CDSC upon
redemption. For information on how the CDSC is calculated, see "Transaction
Details," page .
Shares are purchased at the next offering price or NAV, as applicable,
calculated after your order is received and accepted by the transfer agent.
The offering price and NAV are normally calculated at 4:00 p.m. Eastern
time.
It is the responsibility of your investment professional to transmit your
order to buy shares to the appropriate transfer agent before 4:00 p.m.
Eastern time.
The transfer agent must receive payment within three business days after an
order for shares is placed; otherwise your purchase order may be canceled
and you could be held liable for resulting fees and/or losses.
Share certificates are not available for Class A or Class B shares.
IF YOU ARE NEW TO THE FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS, complete and sign an account
application and mail it along with your check. If there is no account
application accompanying this prospectus, call your investment
professional.
IF YOU ALREADY HAVE MONEY INVESTED IN A FIDELITY ADVISOR FUND, you can:
(small solid bullet) Mail an account application with a check,
(small solid bullet) Place an order and wire money into your account, 
(small solid bullet) Open your account by exchanging from the same class of
another Fidelity Advisor fund or from another Fidelity fund, or
(small solid bullet) Contact your investment professional.
MINIMUM INVESTMENTS
TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT $2,500*
Through    regular     investment plans** $1,000*
TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT $250*
Through    regular     investment plans $100*
MINIMUM BALANCE $1,000*
* ACCOUNT MINIMUMS ARE WAIVED FOR PURCHASES WITH DISTRIBUTIONS FROM A
FIDELITY DEFINED TRUST ACCOUNT.
** AN ACCOUNT MAY BE OPENED WITH A MINIMUM OF $1,000, PROVIDED THAT A
SYSTEMATIC PAYMENT PLAN PERIODICALLY FUNDS THE ACCOUNT. FOR MORE
INFORMATION, PLEASE REFER TO PAGE        .
PURCHASE AMOUNTS OF MORE THAN $100,000 WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED FOR CLASS B
SHARES.
For further information on opening an account, please consult your
investment professional or refer to the account application.
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                 <C>                                                     <C>                                                     
                    TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT                                      TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT   
 
PHONE               (small solid bullet) Contact your investment            (small solid bullet) Contact your investment            
YOUR INVESTMENT 
PROFESSIONAL        professional or, if you are investing                   professional or, if you are investing                   
                    through a broker-dealer, call                           through a broker-dealer, call                           
                    1-800-522-7297. If you are investing                    1-800-522-7297. If you are investing                    
                    through a bank representative, call                     through a bank representative, call                     
                    1-800-843-3001.                                         1-800-843-3001.                                         
                    (small solid bullet) Exchange from the same class of    (small solid bullet) Exchange from the same class of    
                    another Fidelity Advisor fund or from                   another Fidelity Advisor fund or from                   
                    another Fidelity fund account with                      another Fidelity fund account with                      
                    the same registration, including                        the same registration, including                        
                    name, address, and taxpayer ID                          name, address, and taxpayer ID                          
                    number.                                                 number.                                                 
 
</TABLE>
 
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>              <C>                                                   <C>                                                          
Mail 
(mail_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Complete and sign the account    (small solid bullet) Make your check payable to "Fidelity    
                 application. Make your check                          Advisor Municipal Bond Fund" and                             
                 payable to "Fidelity Advisor                          note the applicable class. Indicate                          
                 Municipal Bond Fund" and note the                     your fund account number on your                             
                 applicable class. Mail to the address                 check and mail to the address                                
                 indicated on the application.                         printed on your account statement.                           
                                                                      (small solid bullet) Exchange by mail: call your             
                                                                      investment professional for                                  
                                                                       instructions.                                                
 
</TABLE>
 
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>          <C>                                                        <C>                                                         
In Person 
(hand_graphic) (small solid bullet) Bring your account application and  (small solid bullet) Bring your check to your investment    
             check to your investment                                   professional.                                               
             professional.                                                                                                          
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                   <C>                                    <C>                                                    
Wire (wire_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Not available.    (small solid bullet) If you are investing through a    
                                                             broker-dealer, wire to:                                
                                                               State Street Bank & Trust Co.                        
                                                               Routing # 011000028                                  
                                                             ATTN:  Custody &                                       
                                                             Shareholder Services Division                          
                                                             CREDIT:  Fund Name                                     
                                                               DDA# 99029084                                        
                                                             FBO: (Account name)                                    
                                                               (Account number)                                     
                                                              If you are investing through a bank                   
                                                             representative, wire to:                               
                                                               Banker's Trust Co.                                   
                                                               Routing # 021001033                                  
                                                               Fidelity DART Depository                             
                                                               Acct #00159759                                       
                                                             FBO: (Account name)                                    
                                                               (Account number)                                     
                                                              Specify "Fidelity Advisor Municipal                   
                                                             Bond Fund," note the applicable                        
                                                             class, and include your account                        
                                                             number and your name.                                  
 
</TABLE>
 
HOW TO SELL SHARES
You can arrange to take money out of your fund account at any time by
selling (redeeming) some or all of your shares. Your shares will be sold at
the next NAV calculated after your order is received and accepted by the
transfer agent, less any applicable CDSC. NAV is normally calculated at
4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
TO SELL SHARES IN AN ACCOUNT, you may use any of the methods described on
these pages.
IF YOU ARE SELLING SOME BUT NOT ALL OF YOUR ACCOUNT SHARES, leave at least
$1,000 worth of shares in the account to keep it open (account minimums do
not apply to Fidelity Defined Trust accounts).
TO SELL SHARES BY BANK WIRE, you will need to sign up for this service in
advance.
CERTAIN REQUESTS MUST INCLUDE A SIGNATURE GUARANTEE. It is designed to
protect you and the fund from fraud. Your request must be made in writing
and include a signature guarantee if any of the following situations apply:
(small solid bullet) You wish to redeem more than $100,000 worth of shares,
(small solid bullet) Your account registration has changed within the last
30 days,
(small solid bullet) The check is being mailed to a different address than
the one on your account (record address),
(small solid bullet) The check is being made payable to someone other than
the account owner,
(small solid bullet) The redemption proceeds are being transferred to a
Fidelity account with a different registration,
(small solid bullet) You wish to set up the bank wire feature, or
(small solid bullet) You wish to have redemption proceeds wired to a
non-predesignated bank account.
You should be able to obtain a signature guarantee from a bank, broker,
dealer, credit union (if authorized under state law), securities exchange
or association, clearing agency, or savings association. A notary public
cannot provide a signature guarantee.
SELLING SHARES IN WRITING
Write a "letter of instruction" with:
(small solid bullet) Your name,
(small solid bullet) The fund's name,
(small solid bullet) The applicable class name,
(small solid bullet) Your fund account number,
(small solid bullet) The dollar amount or number of shares to be redeemed,
and
(small solid bullet) Any other applicable requirements listed in the
following table.
Deliver your letter to your investment professional, or mail it to the
following address:
(small solid bullet) If you purchased your shares through a broker-dealer:
Fidelity Advisor Funds
P.O. Box 8302
Boston, MA 02266-8302
(small solid bullet) If you purchased your shares through a bank
representative:
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company
P.O. Box 1182
Boston, MA 02103-1182
Unless otherwise instructed, the transfer agent will send a check to the
record address.
 
 
 
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                                        ACCOUNT TYPE                      SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS   
PHONE                                   All account types                 (small solid bullet) Maximum check request: $100,000.     
YOUR INVESTMENT PROFESSIONAL                                              (small solid bullet) You may exchange to the same         
                                                                          class of other Fidelity Advisor funds                     
                                                                          or to other Fidelity funds if both                        
                                                                          accounts are registered with the                          
                                                                          same name(s), address, and                                
                                                                          taxpayer ID number.                                       
 
Mail or in Person (mail_graphic)
(hand_graphic)                          Individual, Joint Tenant,         (small solid bullet) The letter of instruction must be    
                                        Sole Proprietorship, UGMA, UTMA   signed by all persons required to                         
                                                                          sign for transactions, exactly as                         
                                                                          their names appear on the account                         
                                                                          and sent to your investment                               
                                                                          professional.                                             
 
                                        Trust                             (small solid bullet) The trustee must sign the letter     
                                                                          indicating capacity as trustee. If the                    
                                                                          trustee's name is not in the account                      
                                                                          registration, provide a copy of the                       
                                                                          trust document certified within the                       
                                                                          last 60 days.                                             
 
                                        Business or Organization          (small solid bullet) At least one person authorized by    
                                                                          corporate resolution to act on the                        
                                                                          account must sign the letter.                             
 
                                        Executor, Administrator,          (small solid bullet) For instructions, contact your       
                                        Conservator/Guardian              investment professional or, if you                        
                                                                          purchased your shares through a                           
                                                                         broker-dealer, call 1-800-522-7297.                       
                                                                          If you purchased your shares                              
                                                                          through a bank representative, call                       
                                                                          1-800-843-3001.                                           
 
Wire (wire_graphic)                     All account types                 (small solid bullet) You must sign up for the wire        
                                                                          feature before using it. To verify that                   
                                                                          it is in place, contact your                              
                                                                          investment professional or, if you                        
                                                                          purchased your shares through a                           
                                                                          broker-dealer, call 1-800-522-7297.                       
                                                                          If you purchased your shares                              
                                                                          through a bank representative, call                       
                                                                          1-800-843-3001. Minimum wire:                             
                                                                          $500.                                                     
                                                                          (small solid bullet) Your wire redemption request must    
                                                                         be received by the transfer agent                         
                                                                          before 4:00 p.m. Eastern time for                         
                                                                          money to be wired on the next                             
                                                                          business day.                                             
 
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INVESTOR SERVICES
Fidelity Advisor funds provide a variety of services to help you manage
your account.
INFORMATION SERVICES
STATEMENTS AND REPORTS that the transfer agent sends to you include the
following:
(small solid bullet) Confirmation statements (after every transaction that
affects your account balance or your account registration)
(small solid bullet) Account statements (quarterly)
(small solid bullet) Financial reports (every six months)
To reduce expenses, only one copy of most financial reports and
prospectuses will be mailed to your household, even if you have more than
one account in the fund. Call your investment professional if you need
additional copies of financial reports and prospectuses.
TRANSACTION SERVICES
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE. You may sell your shares and buy shares of the same
class of other Fidelity Advisor funds or shares of other Fidelity funds by
telephone or in writing. The Class A shares you exchange will carry credit
for any front-end sales charge you previously paid in connection with their
purchase.
Note that exchanges out of the fund are limited to four per calendar year,
and that they may have tax consequences for you. For details on policies
and restrictions governing exchanges, including circumstances under which a
shareholder's exchange privilege may be suspended or revoked, see "Exchange
Restrictions," page .
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PROGRAM lets you set up periodic
redemptions from your account. Class A shares with an account value of
$10,000 or more are eligible for this program. Because of Class A's
front-end sales charge, you may not want to set up a systematic withdrawal
plan during a period when you are buying Class A shares on a regular basis.
One easy way to pursue your financial goals is to invest money regularly.
Fidelity Advisor funds offer convenient services that let you transfer
money into your fund account, or between fund accounts, automatically.
While regular investment plans do not guarantee a profit and will not
protect you against loss in a declining market, they can be an excellent
way to invest for a home, educational expenses, and other long-term
financial goals. 
REGULAR INVESTMENT PLANS
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PROGRAM
TO MOVE MONEY FROM YOUR BANK ACCOUNT TO A FIDELITY ADVISOR FUND
 
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MINIMUM  MINIMUM                                                                                                 
INITIAL  ADDITIONAL   FREQUENCY              SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                              
$1,000  $100          Monthly, bimonthly,    (small solid bullet) For a new account, complete the appropriate    
                      quarterly,             section on the application.                                         
                      or semi-annually       (small solid bullet) For existing accounts, call your investment    
                                             professional for an application.                                    
                                             (small solid bullet) To change the amount or frequency of your      
                                             investment, contact your investment professional                    
                                             directly or, if you purchased your shares through a                 
                                             broker-dealer, call 1-800-522-7297. If you purchased                
                                             your shares through a bank representative, call                     
                                             1-800-843-3001. Call at least 10 business days prior                
                                             to your next scheduled investment date (20                          
                                             business days if you purchased your shares through                  
                                             a bank).                                                            
 
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TO DIRECT DISTRIBUTIONS FROM A FIDELITY DEFINED TRUST TO A FIDELITY ADVISOR
FUND 
 
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<S>                   <C>   <C>                                                                        
MINIMUM  MINIMUM                                                                                       
INITIAL  ADDITIONAL         SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                                     
Not  Not                    (small solid bullet) For a new or existing account, ask your investment    
Applicable  Ap              professional for the appropriate enrollment form.                          
plicable                    (small solid bullet) To change the fund to which your distributions are    
                            directed, contact your investment professional for                         
                            instructions.                                                              
 
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FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC EXCHANGE PROGRAM
TO MOVE MONEY FROM A FIDELITY MONEY MARKET FUND OR A FIDELITY ADVISOR FUND
TO ANOTHER FIDELITY ADVISOR FUND
 
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<S>       <C>                   <C>                                                                           
MINIMUM   FREQUENCY             SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                                        
$100      Monthly, quarterly,   (small solid bullet) To establish, call your investment professional after    
          semi-annually, or     both accounts are opened.                                                     
          annually              (small solid bullet) To change the amount or frequency of your                
                                investment, contact your investment professional                              
                                directly or, if you purchased your shares through a                           
                                broker-dealer, call 1-800-522-7297. If you purchased                          
                                your shares through a bank representative, call                               
                                1-800-843-3001.                                                               
                                (small solid bullet) The account from which the exchanges are to be           
                                processed must have a minimum balance of                                      
                                $10,000. The account into which the exchange is                               
                                being processed must have a minimum of $1,000.                                
                                (small solid bullet) Both accounts must have the same registrations           
                                and taxpayer ID numbers.                                                      
                                (small solid bullet) Call at least 2 business days prior to your next         
                                scheduled exchange date.                                                      
 
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SHAREHOLDER AND ACCOUNT POLICIES
 
 
DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS, AND TAXES
The fund distributes substantially all of its net investment income and
capital gains to shareholders each year. Income dividends are declared
daily and paid monthly. Capital gains   , if any,     are normally
distributed in February and December.
DISTRIBUTION OPTIONS
When you open an account, specify on your account application how you want
to receive your distributions. The fund offers four options:
1. REINVESTMENT OPTION. Your dividend and capital gain distributions will
be automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same class of the
fund. If you do not indicate a choice on your application, you will be
assigned this option.
2. INCOME-EARNED OPTION. Your capital gain distributions will be
automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same class of the
fund, but you will be sent a check for each dividend distribution.
3. CASH OPTION. You will be sent a check for your dividend and capital gain
distributions.
4. DIRECTED DIVIDENDS(registered trademark) PROGRAM. Your dividend and
capital gain distributions will be automatically invested in the same class
of shares of another identically registered Fidelity Advisor fund.
If you select distribution option 2 or 3 and the U.S. Postal Service cannot
deliver your checks, or if your checks remain uncashed for six months,
those checks will be reinvested in your account at the current NAV and your
election may be converted to the Reinvestment Option. To change your
distribution option, call your investment professional directly or, if you
purchased your shares through a broker-dealer, call 1-800-522-7297. If you
purchased your shares through a bank representative, call 1-800-843-3001.
Shares purchased through reinvestment of dividend and capital gain
distributions are not subject to a sales charge. If you direct Class A
distributions to a fund with a front-end sales charge, you will not pay a
sales charge on those purchases.
Dividends will be reinvested at the applicable class's NAV on the last day
of the month. Capital gain distributions will be reinvested at the NAV as
of the date the class deducts the distribution from its NAV. The mailing of
distribution checks will begin within seven days, or longer for a December
ex-dividend date.
TAXES
As with any investment, you should consider how an investment in a tax-free
fund could affect you. Below are some of the fund's tax implications.
TAXES ON DISTRIBUTIONS. Interest income that the fund earns is distributed
to shareholders as income dividends. Interest that is federally tax-free
remains tax-free when it is distributed. 
However, gain on the sale of tax-free bonds results in taxable
distributions. Short-term capital gains and a portion of the gain on bonds
purchased at a discount are taxed as dividends. Long-term capital gain
distributions are taxed as long-term capital gains. These distributions are
taxable when they are paid, whether you take them in cash or reinvest them.
However, distributions declared in December and paid in January are taxable
as if they were paid on December 31.
   Every January, t    he transfer agent will send you and the IRS a
statement showing the tax status of the distributions paid to you in the
previous year.
The interest from some municipal securities is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax. The fund may invest up to 100% of its assets in
these securities. Individuals who are subject to the tax must report this
interest on their tax returns.
A portion of the fund's dividends may be free from state or local taxes.
Income from investments in your state are often tax-free to you. Each year,
the transfer agent will send you a breakdown of your fund's income from
each state to help you calculate your taxes.
During the fiscal year ended 1995, 100% of the fund's income dividends was
free from federal income tax, and 0% of the fund's income dividends was
subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
TAXES ON TRANSACTIONS. Your redemptions-including exchanges-are subject to
capital gains tax. A capital gain or loss is the difference between the
cost of your shares and the price you receive when you sell them. 
Whenever you sell shares of the fund, the transfer agent will send you a
confirmation statement showing how many shares you sold and at what price. 
You will also receive a consolidated transaction statement at least
quarterly. However, it is up to you or your tax preparer to determine
whether this sale resulted in a capital gain and, if so, the amount of tax
to be paid. BE SURE TO KEEP YOUR REGULAR ACCOUNT STATEMENTS; the
information they contain will be essential in calculating the amount of
your capital gains.
"BUYING A DIVIDEND." If you buy shares just before a class deducts a
capital gain distribution from its NAV, you will pay the full price for the
shares and then receive a portion of the price back in the form of a
taxable distribution.
TRANSACTION DETAILS
THE FUND IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS each day the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
is open. Each class's offering price and NAV are normally calculated as of
the close of business of the NYSE, normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
A CLASS'S NAV is the value of a single share. The NAV of each class is
computed by adding that class's pro rata share of the value of the fund's
investments, cash, and other assets, subtracting that class's pro rata
share of the value of the fund's liabilities, subtracting the liabilities
allocated to that class, and dividing the result by the number of shares of
that class that are outstanding.
The fund's assets are valued primarily on the basis of market quotations,
if available. Since market quotations are often unavailable, assets are
usually valued by a method that the Board of Trustees believes accurately
reflects fair value.
THE OFFERING PRICE (price to buy one share) is the applicable class's NAV,
divided by the sum of one minus the applicable sales charge percentage for
Class A shares. Class A has a maximum sales charge of 3.50% of the offering
price. The REDEMPTION PRICE (price to sell one share) is the applicable
class's NAV, minus any applicable CDSC for Class B shares.
SALES CHARGES AND INVESTMENT PROFESSIONAL CONCESSIONS - CLASS A 
          Sales Charge         
 
      As a % of   As an         Investment    
      Offering    Approximat    Profession    
      Price       e % of Net    al            
                  Amount        Concession    
                  Invested      as a % of     
                                Offering      
                                Price         
 
Up to $49,999     3.50%    3.63%    3.00%   
 
$50,000 to        3.00%    3.09%    2.50%   
$99,999                                     
 
$100,000 to       2.50%    2.56%    2.00%   
$249,999                                    
 
$250,000 to       1.50%    1.52%    1.25%   
$499,999                                    
 
$500,000 to       1.00%    1.01%    0.75%   
$999,999                                    
 
$1,000,000 or    None*    None*    *        
more                                        
 
* SEE SECTION ENTITLED FINDERS FEE.
FINDERS FEE. On eligible purchases of Class A shares in amounts of $1
million or more, investment professionals will be compensated with a fee at
the rate of 0.25% of the amount purchased. 
Any assets on which a finders fee has been paid will bear a Class A CDSC   
    if they do not remain in Class A shares of the Fidelity Advisor funds,
Initial Class shares of Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury Portfolio or Daily
Money Fund: Money Market Portfolio, or shares of Daily Tax-Exempt Money
Fund, for a period of at least one uninterrupted year. The Class A CDSC
will be 0.25% of the lesser of the cost of the shares at the initial date
of purchase or the value of the shares at redemption, not including any
reinvested dividends or capital gains. Class A CDSC shares representing
reinvested dividends and capital gains, if any, will be redeemed first,
followed by other Class A CDSC shares that have been held for the longest
period of time.
Shares held by an insurance company separate account will be aggregated at
the client (e.g., the contract holder or plan sponsor) level, not at the
separate account level. Upon request, anyone claiming eligibility for the
0.25% fee with respect to shares held by an insurance company separate
account must provide FDC access to records detailing purchases at the
client level.
With respect to employee benefit plans, the Class A CDSC does not apply to
the following types of redemptions: (i) plan loans or distributions or (ii)
exchanges to non-Advisor fund investment options. With respect to
Individual Retirement Accounts, the Class A CDSC does not apply to
redemptions made for disability, payment of death benefits, or required
partial distributions starting at age 70. Your investment professional
should advise the transfer agent at the time your redemption order is
placed if you qualify for a waiver of the Class A CDSC.
CONTINGENT DEFERRED SALES CHARGE. Class B shares may, upon redemption, be
assessed a CDSC based on the 
following schedule:
From Date of Purchase         Contingent Deferred    
                              Sales Charge           
 
Less than 1 year               4%                    
 
1 year to less than 2 years    3%                    
 
2 years to less than 3         3%                    
years                                                
 
3 years to less than 4         2%                    
years                                                
 
4 years to less than 5         1%                    
years                                                
 
5 years to less than 6         0%                    
years[A]                                             
 
[A] AFTER A MAXIMUM HOLDING PERIOD OF SIX YEARS, CLASS B SHARES WILL
CONVERT AUTOMATICALLY TO CLASS A SHARES OF THE FUND. SEE "CONVERSION
FEATURE" BELOW FOR MORE INFORMATION.
When exchanging Class B shares of the fund for Class B shares of another
Fidelity Advisor fund or Class B shares of Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury
Portfolio, your Class B shares retain the CDSC schedule in effect when they
were originally purchased.
Investment professionals with whom FDC has agreements receive as
compensation from FDC a concession equal to 3.00% of your purchase of Class
B shares.
The CDSC will be calculated based on the lesser of the cost of Class B
shares at the initial date of purchase or the value of Class B shares at
redemption, not including any reinvested dividends or capital gains. In
determining the applicability and rate of any CDSC at redemption, Class B
shares representing reinvested dividends and capital gains, if any, will be
redeemed first, followed by Class B shares that have been held for the
longest period of time. Class B shares acquired through distributions
(dividends or capital gains) will not be subject to a CDSC.
CONVERSION FEATURE. After a maximum holding period of six years from the
initial date of purchase, Class B shares and any capital appreciation
associated with those shares convert automatically to Class A shares of the
fund. Conversion to Class A shares will be made at NAV. At the time of
conversion, a portion of the Class B shares purchased through the
reinvestment of dividends or capital gains (Dividend Shares) will also
convert to Class A shares. The portion of Dividend Shares that will convert
is determined by the ratio of your converting Class B non-Dividend Shares
to your total Class B non-Dividend Shares.
For more information about the CDSC, including the conversion feature and
the permitted circumstances for CDSC waivers, contact your investment
professional.
REINSTATEMENT PRIVILEGE. If you have sold all or part of your Class A or
Class B shares of the fund, you may reinvest an amount equal to all or a
portion of the redemption proceeds in the same class of the fund or any of
the other Fidelity Advisor funds, at the NAV next determined after receipt
of your investment order, provided that such reinvestment is made within 30
days of redemption. Under these circumstances, the dollar amount of the
CDSC, if any, you paid on Class A or Class B shares will be reimbursed to
you by reinvesting that amount in Class A or Class B shares, as applicable.
You must reinstate your shares into an account with the same registration.
This privilege may be exercised only once by a shareholder with respect to
the fund and certain restrictions may apply. For purposes of the CDSC
holding period schedule, the holding period of your Class A or Class B
shares will continue as if the shares had not been redeemed.
WHEN YOU SIGN YOUR ACCOUNT APPLICATION, you will be        asked to certify
that your social security or taxpayer identification number is correct and
that you are not subject to 31% backup withholding for failing to report
income to the IRS. If you violate IRS regulations, the IRS can require the
fund to withhold 31% of your taxable distributions and redemptions.
YOU MAY INITIATE MANY TRANSACTIONS BY TELEPHONE. Fidelity and the transfer
agent may only be liable for losses resulting from unauthorized
transactions if they do not follow reasonable procedures designed to verify
the identity of the caller. Fidelity and the transfer agent will request
personalized security codes or other information, and may also record
calls. You should verify the accuracy of the confirmation statements
immediately after receipt. If you do not want the ability to redeem and
exchange by telephone, call the transfer agent for instructions. Additional
documentation may be required from corporations, associations, and certain
fiduciaries.
IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO REACH THE TRANSFER AGENT BY PHONE (for example, during
periods of unusual market activity), consider placing your order by mail. 
THE FUND RESERVES THE RIGHT TO SUSPEND THE OFFERING OF SHARES for a period
of time. The fund also reserves the right to reject any specific purchase
order, including certain purchases by exchange. See "Exchange Restrictions"
on page . Purchase orders may be refused if, in FMR's opinion, they would
disrupt management of the fund.
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO BUY SHARES, your shares will be purchased at the
next NAV or offering price calculated after your order is received and
accepted by the transfer agent. Note the following: 
(small solid bullet) All of your purchases must be made in U.S. dollars and
checks must be drawn on U.S. banks. 
(small solid bullet) The fund does not accept cash. 
(small solid bullet) When making a purchase with more than one check, each
check must have a value of at least $50.
(small solid bullet) The fund reserves the right to limit the number of
checks processed at one time.
(small solid bullet) If your check does not clear, your purchase will be
canceled and you could be liable for any losses or fees the fund or the
transfer agent has incurred.
(small solid bullet) Automated Purchase Orders: You begin to earn dividends
as of the day your funds are received.
(small solid bullet) Other Purchases: You begin to earn dividends as of the
first business day following the day your funds are received.
AUTOMATED PURCHASE ORDERS. Shares    of the applicable class of     the
fund can be purchased or sold through investment professionals utilizing an
automated order placement and settlement system that guarantees payment for
orders on a specified date.
CONFIRMED PURCHASES. Certain financial institutions that meet FDC's
creditworthiness criteria may enter confirmed purchase orders on behalf of
customers by phone, with payment to follow no later than close of business
on the next business day. If payment is not received by the next business
day, the order will be canceled and the financial institution will be
liable for any losses.
TO AVOID THE COLLECTION PERIOD associated with check purchases, consider
buying shares by bank wire, U.S. Postal money order, U.S. Treasury check,
or Federal Reserve check.
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO SELL SHARES, your shares will be sold at the
next NAV, minus any applicable CDSC, calculated after your order is
received and accepted by the transfer agent. Note the following: 
(small solid bullet) Normally, redemption proceeds will be mailed to you on
the next business day, but if making immediate payment could adversely
affect the fund, it may take up to seven days to pay you. 
(small solid bullet) Shares will earn dividends through the date of
redemption; however, shares redeemed on a Friday or prior to a holiday will
continue to earn dividends until the next business day.
(small solid bullet) The fund may hold payment on redemptions until it is
reasonably satisfied that investments made by check have been collected,
which can take up to seven business days.
(small solid bullet) Redemptions may be suspended or payment dates
postponed when the NYSE is closed (other than weekends or holidays), when
trading on the NYSE is restricted, or as permitted by the SEC.
THE TRANSFER AGENT RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DEDUCT AN ANNUAL MAINTENANCE FEE
of $12.00 from accounts with a value of less than $2,500 (including any
amount paid as a sales charge), subject to an annual maximum charge of
$60.00 per shareholder. Accounts opened after September 30 will not be
subject to the fee for that year. The fee, which is payable to the transfer
agent, is designed to offset in part the relatively higher costs of
servicing smaller accounts. The fee will not be deducted from retirement
accounts (except non-prototype retirement accounts), accounts using a
systematic investment program, certain (Network Level I and III) accounts
which are maintained through National Securities Clearing Corporation
(NSCC), or if total assets in Fidelity mutual funds exceed $50,000.
Eligibility for the $50,000 waiver is determined by aggregating Fidelity
mutual fund accounts (excluding contractual plans) maintained (i) by FIIOC,
(ii) by State Street Bank & Trust Company, and (iii) through NSCC; provided
those accounts are registered under the same primary social security
number.
IF YOUR ACCOUNT BALANCE FALLS BELOW $1,000, you will be given 30 days'
notice to reestablish the minimum balance. If you do not increase your
balance, the transfer agent reserves the right to close your account and
send the proceeds to you. Your shares will be redeemed at the NAV, minus
any applicable CDSC, on the day your account is closed. 
THE TRANSFER AGENT MAY CHARGE A FEE FOR SPECIAL SERVICES, such as providing
historical account documents, that are beyond the normal scope of its
services. 
FDC will, at its expense, provide promotional incentives such as sales
contests and luxury trips to investment professionals who support the sale
of shares of the funds. In some instances, these incentives will be offered
only to certain types of investment professionals, such as bank-affiliated
or non-bank affiliated broker-dealers, or to investment professionals whose
representatives provide services in connection with the sale or expected
sale of significant amounts of shares.
EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS
As a shareholder, you have the privilege of exchanging Class A or Class B
shares of the fund for the same class of shares of other Fidelity Advisor
funds; Class A shares for Initial Class shares of Daily Money Fund: U.S.
Treasury Portfolio or Daily Money Fund: Money Market Portfolio, or shares
of Daily Tax-Exempt Money Fund; and Class B shares for Class B shares of
Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury Portfolio. However, you should note the
following:
(small solid bullet) The fund you are exchanging into must be registered
for sale in your state.
(small solid bullet) You may only exchange between accounts that are
registered in the same name, address, and taxpayer identification number.
(small solid bullet) Before exchanging into a fund, read its prospectus.
(small solid bullet) Exchanges may have tax consequences for you.
(small solid bullet) Because excessive trading can hurt fund performance
and shareholders, the fund reserves the right to temporarily or permanently
terminate the exchange privilege of any investor who makes more than four
exchanges out of the fund per calendar year. Accounts under common
ownership or control, including accounts with the same taxpayer
identification number, will be counted together for purposes of the four
exchange limit.
(small solid bullet) The fund reserves the right to refuse exchange
purchases by any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be
unable to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment
objective and policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely
affected.
(small solid bullet) Any exchanges of Class A or Class B shares are not
subject to a CDSC.
(small solid bullet) Your exchanges may be restricted or refused if the
fund receives or anticipates simultaneous orders affecting significant
portions of the fund's assets. In particular, a pattern of exchanges that
coincides with a "market timing" strategy may be disruptive to the fund.
Although the fund will attempt to give you prior notice whenever it is
reasonably able to do so, it may impose these restrictions at any time. The
fund reserves the right to terminate or modify the exchange privilege in
the future. 
SALES CHARGE REDUCTIONS AND WAIVERS
The front-end sales charge will be reduced for purchases of Class A shares
according to the Sales Charge Schedule shown on page  if your purchase
qualifies for one of the following reduction plans. Please refer to the
fund's SAI for more details about each plan or call your investment
professional.
If you purchased your shares through a broker-dealer, call 1-800-522-7297.
If you purchased your shares through a bank representative, call
1-800-843-3001.
Your purchases and existing balances of Class B shares may be included in
the following programs for purposes of qualifying for a Class A front-end
sales charge reduction.
QUANTITY DISCOUNTS apply to purchases of Class A shares of a single
Fidelity Advisor fund or to combined purchases of Class A and Class B
shares of any Fidelity Advisor fund, and to purchases of Initial Class
shares and Class B shares of Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury Portfolio,
Initial Class shares of Daily Money Fund: Money Market Portfolio, and
shares of Daily Tax-Exempt Money Fund acquired by exchange from any
Fidelity Advisor fund. The minimum investment eligible for a quantity
discount is $50,000, except that the minimum investment for Fidelity
Advisor Short Fixed-Income Fund and Fidelity Advisor Short-Intermediate
Municipal Income Fund is $500,000.
To qualify for a quantity discount, investing in the fund's Class A shares
for several accounts at the same time will be considered a single
transaction (Combined Purchase), as long as shares are purchased through
one investment professional and the total is at least $50,000 (or at least
$500,000 for Fidelity Advisor Short Fixed-Income Fund and Fidelity Advisor
Short-Intermediate Municipal Income Fund).
RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION let you determine your front-end sales charge on
Class A shares by adding to your new purchase of Class A shares the value
of all of the Fidelity Advisor fund Class A and Class B shares held by you,
your spouse, and your children under age 21. You can also add the value of
Initial Class shares and Class B shares of Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury
Portfolio, Initial Class shares of Daily Money Fund: Money Market
Portfolio, and shares of Daily Tax-Exempt Money Fund acquired by exchange
from any Fidelity Advisor fund.
A LETTER OF INTENT (the Letter) lets you receive the same reduced front-end
sales charge on purchases of Class A shares made during a 13-month period
as if the total amount invested during the period had been invested in a
single lump sum. (see Quantity Discounts above.) You must file your
non-binding Letter with the transfer agent within 90 days of the start of
your purchases. Your initial investment must be at least 5% of the amount
you plan to invest. Out of the initial investment, 5% of the dollar amount
specified in the Letter will be registered in your name and held in escrow.
You will earn income dividends and capital gain distributions on escrowed
Class A shares. Neither income dividends nor capital gain distributions
reinvested in additional Class A or Class B shares will apply toward
completion of the Letter. The escrow will be released when your purchase of
the total amount has been completed. You are not obligated to complete the
Letter, and in such a case, sufficient escrowed Class A shares will be
redeemed to pay any applicable front-end sales charges.
A FRONT-END SALES CHARGE WILL NOT APPLY TO THE FOLLOWING CLASS A SHARES:
1. Purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative, or other
employee (or a member of one of their immediate families) of investment
professionals having agreements with FDC;
2. Purchased by a current or former trustee or officer of a Fidelity fund
or a current or retired officer, director or regular employee of FMR Corp.
or its direct or indirect subsidiaries (a Fidelity trustee or employee),
the spouse of a Fidelity trustee or employee, a Fidelity trustee or
employee acting as custodian for a minor child, or a person acting as
trustee of trust for the sole benefit of the minor child of a Fidelity
trustee or employee;
3. Purchased by a charitable organization (as defined in Section 501(c)(3)
of the Internal Revenue Code) investing $100,000 or more;
4. Purchased for a charitable remainder trust or life income pool
established for the benefit of a charitable organization (as defined in
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code);
5. Purchased for a Fidelity or Fidelity Advisor IRA account with the
proceeds of a distribution (i) from an employee benefit plan that qualified
for waiver (11) or had a minimum of $3 million in plan assets invested in
Fidelity funds; or (ii) from an insurance company separate account
qualifying under (6) below, or used to fund annuity contracts purchased by
employee benefit plans having in the aggregate at least $3 million in plan
assets invested in Fidelity funds;
6. Purchased for an insurance company separate account used to fund annuity
contracts for employee benefit plans which, in the aggregate, have more
than 200 eligible employees or a minimum of $1 million in plan assets
invested in Fidelity Advisor funds;
7. Purchased for any state, county, or city, or any governmental
instrumentality, department, authority or agency;
8. Purchased with redemption proceeds from other mutual fund complexes on
which you have previously paid a front-end sales charge or CDSC;
9. Purchased by a trust institution or bank trust department (excluding
assets described in (11) and (12) below) that has executed a participation
agreement with FDC specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications,
and marketing, program and trading restrictions. Assets managed by third
parties do not qualify for this waiver;
10. Purchased for use in a broker-dealer managed account program, provided
the broker-dealer has executed a participation agreement with FDC
specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing,
program and trading restrictions. Employee benefit plan assets do not
qualify for this waiver;
11. Purchased as part of an employee benefit plan having more than (i) 200
eligible employees or a minimum of $1 million of plan assets invested in
Fidelity Advisor funds; or (ii) 25 eligible employees or $250,000 of plan
assets invested in Fidelity Advisor funds that subscribes to the Advisor
Retirement Connection or similar FIIS-sponsored program;
12. Purchased as part of an employee benefit plan through an intermediary
that has executed a participation agreement with FDC specifying certain
asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing, program and trading
restrictions; 
13. Purchased on a discretionary basis by a registered investment advisor
which is not part of an organization primarily engaged in the brokerage
business, that has executed a participation agreement with FDC specifying
certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing, program and
trading restrictions. Employee benefit plan assets do not qualify for this
waiver; or
14. Purchased with distributions of income, principal, and capital gains
from Fidelity Defined Trusts.
In order to continue to qualify for waivers (9), (10) and (13), eligible
investors with existing Class A accounts will be required to sign and
comply with a participation agreement. Investors prior to June 30, 1995
that have not signed a participation agreement will be allowed to continue
investing in Class A shares under the terms of their current relationship
until June 30, 1997, after which they will be prevented from making new or
subsequent purchases in Class A load waived, except that employee benefit
plans will be permitted to make additional purchases of Class A shares load
waived.
You must notify FDC in advance if you qualify for a front-end sales charge
waiver. Employee benefit plan investors must meet additional requirements
specified in the fund's SAI.
If you are investing through an account managed by a broker-dealer, if you
have authorized an investment adviser to make investment decisions for you,
or if you are investing through a trust department, you may qualify to
purchase either Class A shares without a sales charge (as described in (9),
(10) and (13), above) or Institutional Class shares. Because Institutional
Class shares have no sales charge, and do not pay a distribution fee or a
shareholder service fee, Institutional Class shares are expected to have a
higher total return than Class A or Class B shares. Contact your investment
professional to discuss if you qualify.
THE CDSC ON CLASS B SHARES MAY BE WAIVED:
1. In cases of disability or death, provided that Class B shares are
redeemed within one year following the death or the initial determination
of disability; or
2. In connection with a total or partial redemption related to certain
distributions from retirement plans or accounts.
Your investment professional should call Fidelity for more information.
No dealer, sales representative, or any other person has been authorized to
give any information or to make any representations, other than those
contained in this Prospectus and in the related SAI, in connection with the
offer contained in this Prospectus. If given or made, such other
information or representations must not be relied upon as having been
authorized by the fund or FDC. This Prospectus and the related SAI do not
constitute an offer by the fund or by FDC to sell or to buy shares of the
fund to any person to whom it is unlawful to make such offer.
 
 
 
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND: CLASS A & CLASS B
 
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
FORM N-1A         
 
ITEM NUMBER   STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SECTION   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>     <C>       <C>                            <C>                                                
10,11             ............................   Cover Page; Table of Contents                      
 
12                ............................   *                                                  
 
13      a - c     ............................   Investment Policies and Limitations                
 
        d         ............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
14      a - c     ............................   Trustees and Officers                              
 
15      a         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        b - c     ............................   Description of the Trust; Trustees and Officers    
 
16      a(i)      ............................   FMR                                                
 
         (ii)     ............................   Trustees and Officers                              
 
        (iii),b   ............................   Management Contract;                               
 
        c         ............................   Management Contract                                
 
        d         ............................   *                                                  
 
        e         ............................   *                                                  
 
        f         ............................   Distribution and Service Plans                     
 
        g         ............................   *                                                  
 
        h         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        i         ............................   Contracts with FMR Affiliates                      
 
17      a,b,c,d   ............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
        e         ............................   *                                                  
 
18      a         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        b         ............................   *                                                  
 
19      a         ............................   Additional Purchase, Exchange and Redemption       
                                                 Information                                        
 
        b         ............................   Additional Purchase, Exchange and Redemption       
                                                 Information; Valuation                             
 
        c         ............................   *                                                  
 
20                ............................   Distributions and Taxes                            
 
21      a, b      ............................   Contracts with FMR Affiliates; Distribution and    
                                                 Service Plans                                      
 
        c         ............................   *                                                  
 
22                ............................   Performance; Appendix                              
 
23                ............................   Financial Statements                               
 
</TABLE>
 
* Not Applicable
 
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
CLASS A AND CLASS B
A FUND OF FIDELITY MUNICIPAL TRUST
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
   JUNE 30, 1996    
This Statement of Additional Information (SAI) is not a prospectus but
should be read in conjunction with the fund's current Prospectus (dated
   June 30, 1996    ) for Class A and Class B shares. Please retain this
document for future reference. The fund's financial statements and
financial highlights, included in the Annual Report for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1995, are incorporated herein by reference. To obtain an
additional copy of this SAI, the Prospectus, or the Annual Report, please
contact Fidelity Distributors Corporation, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02109 or your investment professional.
TABLE OF CONTENTS                                           PAGE   
 
                                                                   
 
Investment Policies and Limitations                                
 
Portfolio Transactions                                             
 
Valuation                                                          
 
Performance                                                        
 
Additional Purchase, Exchange, and Redemption Information          
 
Distributions and Taxes                                            
 
FMR                                                                
 
Trustees and Officers                                              
 
Management Contract                                                
 
Contracts with FMR Affiliates                                      
 
Distribution and Service Plans                                     
 
Description of the Trust                                           
 
Financial Statements                                               
 
Appendix                                                           
 
INVESTMENT ADVISER
Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR)
DISTRIBUTOR
Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC)
TRANSFER AGENT 
UMB Bank, n.a. (UMB)
 
AMUN-ptb-0696
INVESTMENT POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS
The following policies and limitations supplement those set forth in the
Prospectus. Unless otherwise noted, whenever an investment policy or
limitation states a maximum percentage of the fund's assets that may be
invested in any security or other asset, or sets forth a policy regarding
quality standards, such standard or percentage limitation will be
determined immediately after and as a result of the fund's acquisition of
such security or other asset. Accordingly, any subsequent change in values,
net assets, or other circumstances will not be considered when determining
whether the investment complies with the fund's investment policies and
limitations.
The fund's fundamental investment policies and limitations cannot be
changed without approval by a "majority of the outstanding voting
securities" (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (1940 Act))
of the fund. However, except for the fundamental investment limitations
listed below, the investment policies and limitations described in this SAI
are not fundamental and may be changed without shareholder approval. THE
FOLLOWING ARE THE FUND'S FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS SET FORTH IN
THEIR ENTIRETY. THE FUND MAY NOT:
(1) with respect to 75% of the fund's total assets, purchase the securities
of any issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a result,
(a) more than 5% of the fund's total assets would be invested in the
securities of that issuer, or (b) the fund would hold more than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of that issuer;
(2) issue senior securities, except as permitted under the Investment
Company Act of 1940;
(3) borrow money, except that the fund may borrow money for temporary or
emergency purposes (not for leveraging or investment) in an amount not
exceeding 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) less
liabilities (other than borrowings). Any borrowings that come to exceed
this amount will be reduced within three days (not including Sundays and
holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 33 1/3% limitation;
(4) underwrite securities issued by others, except to the extent that the
fund may be considered an underwriter within the meaning of the Securities
Act of 1933 in the disposition of restricted securities;
(5) purchase the securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities, or tax-exempt obligations issued or guaranteed by a U.S.
territory or possession or a state or local government, or a political
subdivision of any of the foregoing) if, as a result, more than 25% of the
fund's total assets would be invested in securities of companies whose
principal business activities are in the same industry;
(6) purchase or sell real estate unless acquired as a result of ownership
of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent the fund
from investing in securities or other instruments backed by real estate or
securities of companies engaged in the real estate business);
(7) purchase or sell physical commodities unless acquired as a result of
ownership of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent
the fund from purchasing or selling options and futures contracts or from
investing in securities or other instruments backed by physical
commodities); or
(8) lend any security or make any other loan if, as a result, more than 33
1/3% of its total assets would be lent to other parties, but this
limitation does not apply to purchases of debt securities or to repurchase
agreements.
THE FOLLOWING INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS ARE NOT FUNDAMENTAL AND MAY BE CHANGED
WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL.
(i)  The fund does not currently intend to sell securities short, unless it
owns or has the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities sold short, and provided that transactions in futures
contracts and options are not deemed to constitute selling securities
short.
(ii)  The fund does not currently intend to purchase securities on margin,
except that the fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary
for the clearance of transactions, and provided that margin payments in
connection with futures contracts and options on futures contracts shall
not constitute purchasing securities on margin.
(iii) The fund may borrow money only (a) from a bank or from a registered
investment company or portfolio for which FMR or an affiliate serves as
investment adviser, or (b) by engaging in reverse repurchase agreements
with any party (reverse repurchase agreements are treated as borrowings for
purposes of fundamental investment limitation (3)). The fund will not
purchase any security while borrowings representing more than 5% of its
total assets are outstanding. The fund will not borrow from other funds
advised by FMR or its affiliates if total outstanding borrowings
immediately after such borrowing would exceed 15% of the fund's total
assets.
(iv) The fund does not currently intend to purchase any security if, as a
result, more than 10% of its net assets would be invested in securities
that are deemed to be illiquid because they are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions on resale or because they cannot be sold or
disposed of in the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices
at which they are valued.
(v) The fund does not currently intend to engage in repurchase agreements
or make loans, but this limitation does not apply to purchases of debt
securities.
(vi) The fund does not currently intend to (a) purchase securities of other
investment companies, except in the open market where no commission except
the ordinary broker's commission is paid, or (b) purchase or retain
securities issued by other open-end investment companies. Limitations (a)
and (b) do not apply to securities received as dividends, through offers of
exchange, or as a result of a reorganization, consolidation, or merger.
(vii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by domestic or foreign
governments or political subdivisions thereof) if, as a result, more than
5% of its total assets would be invested in the securities of business
enterprises that, including predecessors, have a record of less than three
years of continuous operation.
(viii) The fund does not currently intend to invest in oil, gas, or other
mineral exploration or development programs or leases.
(ix) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer if those officers and Trustees of the trust and those officers and
directors of FMR who individually own more than 1/2 of 1% of the securities
of such issuer together own more than 5% of such issuer's securities.
For purposes of limitations (1) and (5), FMR identifies the issuer of a
security depending on its terms and conditions. In identifying the issuer,
FMR will consider the entity or entities responsible for payment of
interest and repayment of principal and the source of such payments; the
way in which assets and revenues of an issuing political subdivision are
separated from those of other political entities; and whether a
governmental body is guaranteeing the security.
For purposes of limitation (vii), pass-through entities and other special
purpose vehicles or pools of financial assets, such as issuers of
asset-backed securities or investment companies, are not considered
"business enterprises."
For the fund's limitations on futures and options transactions, see the
section entitled "Futures and Options" beginning on page .
AFFILIATED BANK TRANSACTIONS. The fund may engage in transactions with
financial institutions that are, or may be considered to be, "affiliated
persons" of the fund under the 1940 Act. These transactions may include
repurchase agreements with custodian banks; short-term obligations of, and
repurchase agreements with, the 50 largest U.S. banks (measured by
deposits); municipal securities; U.S. Government securities with affiliated
financial institutions that are primary dealers in these securities;
short-term currency transactions; and short-term borrowings. In accordance
with exemptive orders issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), the Board of Trustees has established and periodically reviews
procedures applicable to transactions involving affiliated financial
institutions.
DELAYED-DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS. The fund may buy and sell securities on a
delayed-delivery or when-issued basis. These transactions involve a
commitment by the fund to purchase or sell specific securities at a
predetermined price or yield, with payment and delivery taking place after
the customary settlement period for that type of security. Typically, no
interest accrues to the purchaser until the security is delivered. The fund
may receive fees for entering into delayed-delivery transactions.
When purchasing securities on a delayed-delivery basis, the fund assumes
the rights and risks of ownership, including the risk of price and yield
fluctuations. Because the fund is not required to pay for securities until
the delivery date, these risks are in addition to the risks associated with
the fund's other investments. If the fund remains substantially fully
invested at a time when delayed-delivery purchases are outstanding, the
delayed-delivery purchases may result in a form of leverage. When
delayed-delivery purchases are outstanding, the fund will set aside
appropriate liquid assets in a segregated custodial account to cover its
purchase obligations. When the fund has sold a security on a
delayed-delivery basis, the fund does not participate in further gains or
losses with respect to the security. If the other party to a
delayed-delivery transaction fails to deliver or pay for the securities,
the fund could miss a favorable price or yield opportunity, or could suffer
a loss.
The fund may renegotiate delayed-delivery transactions after they are
entered into, and may sell underlying securities before they are delivered,
which may result in capital gains or losses. 
FEDERALLY TAXABLE OBLIGATIONS. Under normal conditions, the fund does not
intend to invest in securities whose interest is federally taxable.
However, from time to time on a temporary basis, the fund may invest a
portion of its assets in fixed-income obligations whose interest is subject
to federal income tax.
Should the fund invest in federally taxable obligations, it would purchase
securities that in FMR's judgment are of high quality. These would include
obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its agencies or
instrumentalities; obligations of domestic banks; and repurchase
agreements. The fund's standards for high-quality, taxable obligations are
essentially the same as those described by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
(Moody's) in rating corporate obligations within its two highest ratings of
Prime-1 and Prime-2, and those described by Standard & Poor's        (S&P)
in rating corporate obligations within its two highest ratings of A-1 and
A-2.
Proposals to restrict or eliminate the federal income tax exemption for
interest on municipal obligations are introduced before Congress from time
to time. Proposals also may be introduced before state legislatures that
would affect the state tax treatment of the fund's distributions. If such
proposals were enacted, the availability of municipal obligations and the
value of the fund's holdings would be affected and the Trustees would
reevaluate the fund's investment objective and policies. 
FUTURES AND OPTIONS. The following sections pertain to futures and options:
Asset Coverage for Futures and Options Positions, Combined Positions,
Correlation of Price Changes, Futures Contracts, Futures Margin Payments,
Limitations on Futures and Options Transactions, Liquidity of Options and
Futures Contracts, OTC Options, Purchasing Put and Call Options, and
Writing Put and Call Options.
ASSET COVERAGE FOR FUTURES AND OPTIONS POSITIONS. The fund will comply with
guidelines established by the SEC with respect to coverage of options and
futures strategies by mutual funds, and   ,     if the guidelines so
require   ,     will set aside appropriate liquid assets in a segregated
custodial account in the amount prescribed. Securities held in a segregated
account cannot be sold while the futures or option strategy is outstanding,
unless they are replaced with other suitable assets. As a result, there is
a possibility that segregation of a large percentage of the fund's assets
could impede portfolio management or the fund's ability to meet redemption
requests or other current obligations.
COMBINED POSITIONS. The fund may purchase and write options in combination
with each other, or in combination with futures or forward contracts, to
adjust the risk and return characteristics of the overall position. For
example, the fund may purchase a put option and write a call option on the
same underlying instrument, in order to construct a combined position whose
risk and return characteristics are similar to selling a futures contract.
Another possible combined position would involve writing a call option at
one strike price and buying a call option at a lower price, in order to
reduce the risk of the written call option in the event of a substantial
price increase. Because combined options positions involve multiple trades,
they result in higher transaction costs and may be more difficult to open
and close out.
CORRELATION OF PRICE CHANGES. Because there are a limited number of types
of exchange-traded options and futures contracts, it is likely that the
standardized contracts available will not match the fund's current or
anticipated investments exactly. The fund may invest in options and futures
contracts based on securities with different issuers, maturities, or other
characteristics from the securities in which it typically invests, which
involves a risk that the options or futures position will not track the
performance of the fund's other investments.
Options and futures prices can also diverge from the prices of their
underlying instruments, even if the underlying instruments match the fund's
investments well. Options and futures prices are affected by such factors
as current and anticipated short-term interest rates, changes in volatility
of the underlying instrument, and the time remaining until expiration of
the contract, which may not affect security prices the same way. Imperfect
correlation may also result from differing levels of demand in the options
and futures markets and the securities markets, from structural differences
in how options and futures and securities are traded, or from imposition of
daily price fluctuation limits or trading halts. The fund may purchase or
sell options and futures contracts with a greater or lesser value than the
securities it wishes to hedge or intends to purchase in order to attempt to
compensate for differences in volatility between the contract and the
securities, although this may not be successful in all cases. If price
changes in the fund's options or futures positions are poorly correlated
with its other investments, the positions may fail to produce anticipated
gains or result in losses that are not offset by gains in other
investments.
FUTURES CONTRACTS. When the fund purchases a futures contract, it agrees to
purchase a specified underlying instrument at a specified future date. When
the fund sells a futures contract, it agrees to sell the underlying
instrument at a specified future date. The price at which the purchase and
sale will take place is fixed when the fund enters into the contract. Some
currently available futures contracts are based on specific securities,
such as U.S. Treasury bonds or notes, and some are based on indices of
securities prices, such as the Bond Buyer Municipal Bond Index. Futures can
be held until their delivery dates, or can be closed out before then if a
liquid secondary market is available.
The value of a futures contract tends to increase and decrease in tandem
with the value of its underlying instrument. Therefore, purchasing futures
contracts will tend to increase the fund's exposure to positive and
negative price fluctuations in the underlying instrument, much as if it had
purchased the underlying instrument directly. When the fund sells a futures
contract, by contrast, the value of its futures position will tend to move
in a direction contrary to the market. Selling futures contracts,
therefore, will tend to offset both positive and negative market price
changes, much as if the underlying instrument had been sold.
FUTURES MARGIN PAYMENTS. The purchaser or seller of a futures contract is
not required to deliver or pay for the underlying instrument unless the
contract is held until the delivery date. However, both the purchaser and
seller are required to deposit "initial margin" with a futures broker,
known as a futures commission merchant (FCM), when the contract is entered
into. Initial margin deposits are typically equal to a percentage of the
contract's value. If the value of either party's position declines, that
party will be required to make additional "variation margin" payments to
settle the change in value on a daily basis. The party that has a gain may
be entitled to receive all or a portion of this amount. Initial and
variation margin payments do not constitute purchasing securities on margin
for purposes of the fund's investment limitations. In the event of the
bankruptcy of an FCM that holds margin on behalf of the fund, the fund may
be entitled to return of margin owed to it only in proportion to the amount
received by the FCM's other customers, potentially resulting in losses to
the fund.
LIMITATIONS ON FUTURES AND OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS. The fund has filed a
notice of eligibility for exclusion from the definition of the term
"commodity pool operator" with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) and the National Futures Association, which regulate trading in the
futures markets. The fund intends to comply with Rule 4.5 under the
Commodity Exchange Act, which limits the extent to which the fund can
commit assets to initial margin deposits and option premiums.
In addition, the fund will not: (a) sell futures contracts, purchase put
options, or write call options if, as a result, more than 25% of the fund's
total assets would be hedged with futures and options under normal
conditions; (b) purchase futures contracts or write put options if, as a
result, the fund's total obligations upon settlement or exercise of
purchased futures contracts and written put options would exceed 25% of its
total assets; or (c) purchase call options if, as a result, the current
value of option premiums for call options purchased by the fund would
exceed 5% of the fund's total assets. These limitations do not apply to
options attached to or acquired or traded together with their underlying
securities, and do not apply to securities that incorporate features
similar to options.
The above limitations on the fund's investments in futures contracts and
options, and the fund's policies regarding futures contracts and options
discussed elsewhere in this Statement of Additional Information are not
fundamental policies and may be changed as regulatory agencies permit.
LIQUIDITY OF OPTIONS AND FUTURES CONTRACTS. There is no assurance a liquid
secondary market will exist for any particular options or futures contract
at any particular time. Options may have relatively low trading volume and
liquidity if their strike prices are not close to the underlying
instrument's current price. In addition, exchanges may establish daily
price fluctuation limits for options and futures contracts, and may halt
trading if a contract's price moves upward or downward more than the limit
in a given day. On volatile trading days when the price fluctuation limit
is reached or a trading halt is imposed, it may be impossible for the fund
to enter into new positions or close out existing positions. If the
secondary market for a contract is not liquid because of price fluctuation
limits or otherwise, it could prevent prompt liquidation of unfavorable
positions, and potentially could require the fund to continue to hold a
position until delivery or expiration regardless of changes in its value.
As a result, the fund's access to other assets held to cover its options or
futures positions could also be impaired.
OTC OPTIONS. Unlike exchange-traded options, which are standardized with
respect to the underlying instrument, expiration date, contract size, and
strike price, the terms of over-the-counter (OTC) options (options not
traded on exchanges) generally are established through negotiation with the
other party to the option contract. While this type of arrangement allows
the fund greater flexibility to tailor an option to its needs, OTC options
generally involve greater credit risk than exchange-traded options, which
are guaranteed by the clearing organization of the exchanges where they are
traded.
PURCHASING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. By purchasing a put option, the fund
obtains the right (but not the obligation) to sell the option's underlying
instrument at a fixed strike price. In return for this right, the fund pays
the current market price for the option (known as the option premium).
Options have various types of underlying instruments, including specific
securities, indices of securities prices, and futures contracts. The fund
may terminate its position in a put option it has purchased by allowing it
to expire or by exercising the option. If the option is allowed to expire,
the fund will lose the entire premium it paid. If the fund exercises the
option, it completes the sale of the underlying instrument at the strike
price. The fund may also terminate a put option position by closing it out
in the secondary market at its current price, if a liquid secondary market
exists.
The buyer of a typical put option can expect to realize a gain if security
prices fall substantially. However, if the underlying instrument's price
does not fall enough to offset the cost of purchasing the option, a put
buyer can expect to suffer a loss (limited to the amount of the premium
paid, plus related transaction costs).
The features of call options are essentially the same as those of put
options, except that the purchaser of a call option obtains the right to
purchase, rather than sell, the underlying instrument at the option's
strike price. A call buyer typically attempts to participate in potential
price increases of the underlying instrument with risk limited to the cost
of the option if security prices fall. At the same time, the buyer can
expect to suffer a loss if security prices do not rise sufficiently to
offset the cost of the option.
WRITING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. When the fund writes a put option, it takes
the opposite side of the transaction from the option's purchaser. In return
for receipt of the premium, the fund assumes the obligation to pay the
strike price for the option's underlying instrument if the other party to
the option chooses to exercise it. When writing an option on a futures
contract, the fund will be required to make margin payments to an FCM as
described above for futures contracts. The fund may seek to terminate its
position in a put option it writes before exercise by closing out the
option in the secondary market at its current price. If the secondary
market is not liquid for a put option the fund has written, however, the
fund must continue to be prepared to pay the strike price while the option
is outstanding, regardless of price changes, and must continue to set aside
assets to cover its position.
If security prices rise, a put writer would generally expect to profit,
although its gain would be limited to the amount of the premium it
received. If security prices remain the same over time, it is likely that
the writer will also profit, because it should be able to close out the
option at a lower price. If security prices fall, the put writer would
expect to suffer a loss. This loss should be less than the loss from
purchasing the underlying instrument directly, however, because the premium
received for writing the option should mitigate the effects of the decline.
Writing a call option obligates the fund to sell or deliver the option's
underlying instrument, in return for the strike price, upon exercise of the
option. The characteristics of writing call options are similar to those of
writing put options, except that writing calls generally is a profitable
strategy if prices remain the same or fall. Through receipt of the option
premium, a call writer mitigates the effects of a price decline. At the
same time, because a call writer must be prepared to deliver the underlying
instrument in return for the strike price, even if its current value is
greater, a call writer gives up some ability to participate in security
price increases.
ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS are investments that cannot be sold or disposed of in
the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices at which they
are valued. Under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, FMR determines
the liquidity of the fund's investments and, through reports from FMR, the
Board monitors investments in illiquid instruments. In determining the
liquidity of the fund's investments, FMR may consider various factors,
including (1) the frequency of trades and quotations, (2) the number of
dealers and prospective purchasers in the marketplace, (3) dealer
undertakings to make a market, (4) the nature of the security (including
any demand or tender features), and (5) the nature of the marketplace for
trades (including the ability to assign or offset the fund's rights and
obligations relating to the investment).
Investments currently considered by the fund to be illiquid include
over-the-counter options. Also, FMR may determine some restricted
securities and municipal lease obligations to be illiquid. However, with
respect to over-the-counter options the fund writes, all or a portion of
the value of the underlying instrument may be illiquid depending on the
assets held to cover the option and the nature and terms of any agreement
the fund may have to close out the option before expiration.
In the absence of market quotations, illiquid investments are priced at
fair value as determined in good faith by a committee appointed by the
Board of Trustees. If through a change in values, net assets, or other
circumstances, the fund were in a position where more than 10% of its net
assets was invested in illiquid securities, it would seek to take
appropriate steps to protect liquidity.
INDEXED SECURITIES. The fund may purchase securities whose prices are
indexed to the prices of other securities, securities indices, or other
financial indicators. Indexed securities typically, but not always, are
debt securities or deposits whose value at maturity or coupon rate is
determined by reference to a specific instrument or statistic. Indexed
securities may have principal payments as well as coupon payments that
depend on the performance of one or more interest rates. Their coupon rates
or principal payments may change by several percentage points for every 1%
interest rate change. One example of indexed securities is inverse
floaters.
The performance of indexed securities depends to a great extent on the
performance of the security or other instrument to which they are indexed,
and may also be influenced by interest rate changes. At the same time,
indexed securities are subject to the credit risks associated with the
issuer of the security, and their values may decline substantially if the
issuer's creditworthiness deteriorates. Indexed securities may be more
volatile than the underlying instruments.
INTERFUND BORROWING AND LENDING PROGRAM. Pursuant to an exemptive order
issued by the SEC, the fund has received permission to lend money to, and
borrow money from, other funds advised by FMR or its affiliates, but it
currently intends to participate in this program only as a borrower.
Interfund borrowings normally extend overnight but can have a maximum
duration of seven days. A fund will borrow through the program only when
the costs are equal to or lower than the costs of bank loans. Loans may be
called on one day's notice, and a fund may have to borrow from a bank at a
higher interest rate if an interfund loan is called or not renewed. 
INVERSE FLOATERS have variable interest rates that typically move in the
opposite direction from prevailing short-term interest rate levels - rising
when prevailing short-term interest rates fall, and vice versa. This
interest rate feature can make the prices of inverse floaters considerably
more volatile than bonds with comparable maturities.
MUNICIPAL LEASES and participation interests therein may take the form of a
lease, an installment purchase, or a conditional sale contract and are
issued by state and local governments and authorities to acquire land or a
wide variety of equipment and facilities. Generally, the fund will not hold
such obligations directly as a lessor of the property, but will purchase a
participation interest in a municipal obligation from a bank or other third
party. A participation interest gives the fund a specified, undivided
interest in the obligation in proportion to its purchased interest in the
total amount of the obligation.
Municipal leases frequently have risks distinct from those associated with
general obligation or revenue bonds. State constitutions and statutes set
forth requirements that states or municipalities must meet to incur debt.
These may include voter referenda, interest rate limits, or public sale
requirements. Leases, installment purchases, or conditional sale contracts
(which normally provide for title to the leased asset to pass to the
governmental issuer) have evolved as a means for governmental issuers to
acquire property and equipment without meeting their constitutional and
statutory requirements for the issuance of debt. Many leases and contracts
include "non-appropriation clauses" providing that the governmental issuer
has no obligation to make future payments under the lease or contract
unless money is appropriated for such purposes by the appropriate
legislative body on a yearly or other periodic basis. Non-appropriation
clauses free the issuer from debt issuance limitations. 
MUNICIPAL MARKET DISRUPTION RISK. The value of municipal securities may be
affected by uncertainties in the municipal market related to legislation or
litigation involving the taxation of municipal securities or the rights of
municipal securities holders in the event of a bankruptcy. Municipal
bankruptcies are relatively rare, and certain provisions of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code governing such bankruptcies are unclear and remain
untested. Further, the application of state law to municipal issuers could
produce varying results among the states or among municipal securities
issuers within a state. These legal uncertainties could affect the
municipal securities market generally, certain specific segments of the
market, or the relative credit quality of particular securities. Any of
these effects could have a significant impact on the prices of some or all
of the municipal securities held by a fund.
MUNICIPAL SECTORS:
ELECTRIC UTILITIES INDUSTRY. The electric utilities industry has been
experiencing, and will continue to experience, increased competitive
pressures. Federal legislation in the last two years will open transmission
access to any electricity supplier, although it is not presently known to
what extent competition will evolve. Other risks include: (a) the
availability and cost of fuel, (b) the availability and cost of capital,
(c) the effects of conservation on energy demand, (d) the effects of
rapidly changing environmental, safety, and licensing requirements, and
other federal, state, and local regulations, (e) timely and sufficient rate
increases, and (f) opposition to nuclear power.
HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY. The health care industry is subject to regulatory
action by a number of private and governmental agencies, including federal,
state, and local governmental agencies. A major source of revenues for the
health care industry is payments from the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
As a result, the industry is sensitive to legislative changes and
reductions in governmental spending for such programs. Numerous other
factors may affect the industry, such as general and local economic
conditions; demand for services; expenses (including malpractice insurance
premiums); and competition among health care providers. In the future, the
following elements may adversely affect health care facility operations:
adoption of legislation proposing a national health insurance program;
other state or local health care reform measures; medical and technological
advances which dramatically alter the need for health services or the way
in which such services are delivered; changes in medical coverage which
alter the traditional fee-for-service revenue stream; and efforts by
employers, insurers, and governmental agencies to reduce the costs of
health insurance and health care services.
HOUSING. Housing revenue bonds are generally issued by a state, county,
city, local housing authority, or other public agency. They generally are
secured by the revenues derived from mortgages purchased with the proceeds
of the bond issue. It is extremely difficult to predict the supply of
available mortgages to be purchased with the proceeds of an issue or the
future cash flow from the underlying mortgages. Consequently, there are
risks that proceeds will exceed supply, resulting in early retirement of
bonds, or that homeowner repayments will create an irregular cash flow.
Many factors may affect the financing of multi-family housing projects,
including acceptable completion of construction, proper management,
occupancy and rent levels, economic conditions, and changes to current laws
and regulations.
REFUNDING CONTRACTS. The fund may purchase securities on a when-issued
basis in connection with the refinancing of an issuer's outstanding
indebtedness. Refunding contracts require the issuer to sell and the fund
to buy refunded municipal obligations at a stated price and yield on a
settlement date that may be several months or several years in the future.
The fund generally will not be obligated to pay the full purchase price if
it fails to perform under a refunding contract. Instead, refunding
contracts generally provide for payment of liquidated damages to the issuer
(currently 15-20% of the purchase price). The fund may secure its
obligations under a refunding contract by depositing collateral or a letter
of credit equal to the liquidated damages provisions of the refunding
contract. When required by SEC guidelines, the fund will place liquid
assets in a segregated custodial account equal in amount to its obligations
under refunding contracts.
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a repurchase agreement, the fund purchases a
security and simultaneously commits to sell that security back to the
original seller at an agreed-upon price. The resale price reflects the
purchase price plus an agreed-upon incremental amount which is unrelated to
the coupon rate or maturity of the purchased security. To protect the fund
from risk that the original seller will not fulfill its obligation, the
securities are held in an account of the fund at a bank, marked-to-market
daily, and maintained at a value at least equal to the sale price plus the
accrued incremental amount. While it does not presently appear possible to
eliminate all risks from these transactions (particularly the possibility
that the value of the underlying security will be less than the resale
price, as well as delays and costs to the fund in connection with
bankruptcy proceedings), it is the fund's current policy to engage in
repurchase agreement transactions with parties whose creditworthiness has
been reviewed and found satisfactory by FMR.
RESTRICTED SECURITIES generally can be sold in privately negotiated
transactions, pursuant to an exemption from registration under the
Securities Act of 1933, or in a registered public offering. Where
registration is required, the fund may be obligated to pay all or part of
the registration expense and a considerable period may elapse between the
time it decides to seek registration and the time it may be permitted to
sell a security under an effective registration statement. If, during such
a period, adverse market conditions were to develop, the fund might obtain
a less favorable price than prevailed when it decided to seek registration
of the security.
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the fund
sells a portfolio instrument to another party, such as a bank or
broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase the instrument
at a particular price and time. While a reverse repurchase agreement is
outstanding, the fund will maintain appropriate liquid assets in a
segregated custodial account to cover its obligation under the agreement.
The fund will enter into reverse repurchase agreements only with parties
whose creditworthiness has been found satisfactory by FMR. Such
transactions may increase fluctuations in the market value of the fund's
assets and may be viewed as a form of leverage.
STANDBY COMMITMENTS are puts that entitle holders to same-day settlement at
an exercise price equal to the amortized cost of the underlying security
plus accrued interest, if any, at the time of exercise. The fund may
acquire standby commitments to enhance the liquidity of portfolio
securities. 
Ordinarily the fund will not transfer a standby commitment to a third
party, although it could sell the underlying municipal security to a third
party at any time. The fund may purchase standby commitments separate from
or in conjunction with the purchase of securities subject to such
commitments. In the latter case, the fund would pay a higher price for the
securities acquired, thus reducing their yield to maturity.
Issuers or financial intermediaries may obtain letters of credit or other
guarantees to support their ability to buy securities on demand. FMR may
rely upon its evaluation of a bank's credit in determining whether to
   purchase     an instrument supported by a letter of credit. In
evaluating a foreign bank's credit, FMR will consider whether adequate
public information about the bank is available and whether the bank may be
subject to unfavorable political or economic developments, currency
controls, or other governmental restrictions that might affect the bank's
ability to honor its credit commitment.
Standby commitments are subject to certain risks, including the ability of
issuers of standby commitments to pay for securities at the time the
commitments are exercised; the fact that standby commitments are not
marketable by the fund; and the possibility that the maturities of the
underlying securities may be different from those of the commitments. 
TENDER OPTION BONDS are created by coupling an intermediate- or long-term,
fixed-rate, tax-exempt bond (generally held pursuant to a custodial
arrangement) with a tender agreement that gives the holder the option to
tender the bond at its face value. As consideration for providing the
tender option, the sponsor (usually a bank, broker-dealer, or other
financial institution) receives periodic fees equal to the difference
between the bond's fixed coupon rate and the rate (determined by a
remarketing or similar agent) that would cause the bond, coupled with the
tender option, to trade at par on the date of such determination. After
payment of the tender option fee, the fund effectively holds a demand
obligation that bears interest at the prevailing short-term tax-exempt
rate. In selecting tender option bonds for the fund, FMR will consider the
creditworthiness of the issuer of the underlying bond, the custodian, and
the third party provider of the tender option. In certain instances, a
sponsor may terminate a tender option if, for example, the issuer of the
underlying bond defaults on interest payments.
VARIABLE OR FLOATING RATE OBLIGATIONS, including certain participation
interests in municipal instruments, have interest rate adjustment formulas
that help stabilize their market values. Many variable and floating rate
instruments also carry demand features that permit the fund to sell them at
par value plus accrued interest on short notice. 
In many instances bonds and participation interests have tender options or
demand features that permit the fund to tender (or put) the bonds to an
institution at periodic intervals and to receive the principal amount
thereof. The fund considers variable rate instruments structured in this
way (Participating VRDOs) to be essentially equivalent to other VRDOs it
purchases. The IRS has not ruled whether the interest on Participating
VRDOs is tax-exempt and, accordingly, the fund intends to purchase these
instruments based on opinions of bond counsel. A fund may also invest in
fixed-rate bonds that are subject to third party puts and in participation
interests in such bonds held by a bank in trust or otherwise.
ZERO COUPON BONDS do not make regular interest payments. Instead, they are
sold at a deep discount from their face value and are redeemed at face
value when they mature. Because zero coupon bonds do not pay current
income, their prices can be very volatile when interest rates change. In
calculating its daily dividend, the fund takes into account as income a
portion of the difference between a zero coupon bond's purchase price and
its face value.
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
All orders for the purchase or sale of portfolio securities are placed on
behalf of the funds by FMR pursuant to authority contained in the fund's
management contract. FMR is also responsible for the placement of
transaction orders for other investment companies and accounts for which it
or its affiliates act as investment adviser. In selecting broker-dealers,
subject to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws, FMR
considers various relevant factors, including, but not limited to, the size
and type of the transaction; the nature and character of the markets for
the security to be purchased or sold; the execution efficiency, settlement
capability, and financial condition of the broker-dealer firm; the
broker-dealer's execution services rendered on a continuing basis; and the
reasonableness of any commissions.
The fund may execute portfolio transactions with broker-dealers who provide
research and execution services to the fund or other accounts over which
FMR or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. Such services may
include advice concerning the value of securities; the advisability of
investing in, purchasing, or selling securities; and the availability of
securities or the purchasers or sellers of securities. In addition, such
broker-dealers may furnish analyses and reports concerning issuers,
industries, securities, economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy,
and performance of accounts; effect securities transactions, and perform
functions incidental thereto (such as clearance and settlement). The
selection of such broker-dealers generally is made by FMR (to the extent
possible consistent with execution considerations) based upon the quality
of research and execution services provided.
The receipt of research from broker-dealers that execute transactions on
behalf of the fund may be useful to FMR in rendering investment management
services to the fund or its other clients, and conversely, such research
provided by broker-dealers who have executed transaction orders on behalf
of other FMR clients may be useful to FMR in carrying out its obligations
to the fund. The receipt of such research has not reduced FMR's normal
independent research activities; however, it enables FMR to avoid the
additional expenses that could be incurred if FMR tried to develop
comparable information through its own efforts.
Subject to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws,
broker-dealers may receive commissions for agency transactions that are in
excess of the amount of commissions charged by other broker-dealers in
recognition of their research and execution services. In order to cause the
fund to pay such higher commissions, FMR must determine in good faith that
such commissions are reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage
and research services provided by such executing broker-dealers, viewed in
terms of a particular transaction or FMR's overall responsibilities to the
fund and its other clients. In reaching this determination, FMR will not
attempt to place a specific dollar value on the brokerage and research
services provided, or to determine what portion of the compensation should
be related to those services.
FMR is authorized to use research services provided by and to place
portfolio transactions with brokerage firms that have provided assistance
in the distribution of shares of the fund, or shares of other Fidelity
funds to the extent permitted by law. FMR may use research services
provided by and place agency transactions with Fidelity Brokerage Services,
Inc. (FBSI), a subsidiary of FMR Corp., if the commissions are fair,
reasonable, and comparable to commissions charged by non-affiliated,
qualified brokerage firms for similar services.
Section 11(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 prohibits members of
national securities exchanges from executing exchange transactions for
accounts which they or their affiliates manage, unless certain requirements
are satisfied. Pursuant to such requirements, the Board of Trustees has
authorized FBSI to execute portfolio transactions on national securities
exchanges in accordance with approved procedures and applicable SEC rules.
The Trustees periodically review FMR's performance of its responsibilities
in connection with the placement of portfolio transactions on behalf of the
fund and review the commissions paid by the fund over representative
periods of time to determine if they are reasonable in relation to the
benefits to the fund.
For the fiscal years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994, the fund's portfolio
turnover rates were 72% and 95%, respectively.
For    the     fiscal    years ended     1995, 1994, and 1993, the fund
paid no brokerage commissions.
   During the fiscal year ended 1995, the fund paid no fees to brokerage
firms that provided research services.    
From time to time the Trustees will review whether the recapture for the
benefit of the fund of some portion of the brokerage commissions or similar
fees paid by the fund on portfolio transactions is legally permissible and
advisable. The fund seeks to recapture soliciting broker-dealer fees on the
tender of portfolio securities, but at present no other recapture
arrangements are in effect. The Trustees intend to continue to review
whether recapture opportunities are available and are legally permissible
and, if so, to determine in the exercise of their business judgment whether
it would be advisable for the fund to seek such recapture.
Although the Trustees and officers of the fund are substantially the same
as those of other funds managed by FMR, investment decisions for the fund
are made independently from those of other funds managed by FMR or accounts
managed by FMR affiliates. It sometimes happens that the same security is
held in the portfolio of more than one of these funds or accounts.
Simultaneous transactions are inevitable when several funds and accounts
are managed by the same investment adviser, particularly when the same
security is suitable for the investment objective of more than one fund or
account.
When two or more funds are simultaneously engaged in the purchase or sale
of the same security, the prices and amounts are allocated in accordance
with procedures believed to be appropriate and equitable for each fund. In
some cases this system could have a detrimental effect on the price or
value of the security as far as the fund is concerned. In other cases,
however, the ability of the fund to participate in volume transactions will
produce better executions and prices for the fund. It is the current
opinion of the Trustees that the desirability of retaining FMR as
investment adviser to the fund outweighs any disadvantages that may be said
to exist from exposure to simultaneous transactions.
VALUATION
Fidelity Service Company (FSC) normally determines each class's net asset
value per share (NAV) as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
(normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). The valuation of portfolio securities is
determined as of this time for the purpose of computing each class's
NAV   .    
Portfolio securities are valued by various methods depending on the primary
market or exchange on which they trade. Fixed-income securities may also be
valued on the basis of information furnished by a pricing service that uses
a valuation matrix which incorporates both dealer-supplied valuations and
electronic data processing techniques. Use of pricing services has been
approved by the Board of Trustees. A number of pricing services are
available, and the Trustees, on the basis of an evaluation of these
services, may use various pricing services or discontinue the use of any
pricing service.
Futures contracts and options are valued on the basis of market quotations,
if available.
Securities and other assets for which there is no readily available market
value are valued in good faith by a committee appointed by the Board of
Trustees. The procedures set forth above need not be used to determine the
value of the securities owned by the fund if, in the opinion of a committee
appointed by the Board of Trustees, some other method would more accurately
reflect the fair market value of such securities.
PERFORMANCE
Each class of shares may quote performance in various ways. All performance
information supplied by the fund in advertising is historical and is not
intended to indicate future returns. Share price, yield, and total return
fluctuate in response to market conditions and other factors, and the value
of shares when redeemed may be more or less than their original cost.
YIELD CALCULATIONS. Yields for a class are computed by dividing the class's
pro rata share of the applicable interest income for a given 30-day or
one-month period, net of expenses, by the average number of shares of that
class entitled to receive distributions during the period, dividing this
figure by the class's    NAV     at the end of the period, and annualizing
the result (assuming compounding of income) in order to arrive at an annual
percentage rate. Income is calculated for purposes of yield quotations in
accordance with standardized methods applicable to all stock and bond
funds. In general, interest income is reduced with respect to bonds trading
at a premium over their par value by subtracting a portion of the premium
from income on a daily basis, and is increased with respect to bonds
trading at a discount by adding a portion of the discount to daily income.
Capital gains and losses generally are excluded from the calculation.
Income calculated for the purposes of calculating a class's yield differs
from income as determined for other accounting purposes. Because of the
different accounting methods used, and because of the compounding of income
assumed in yield calculations, a class's yield may not equal its
distribution rate, the income paid to your account, or the income reported
in the fund's financial statements.
Yield information may be useful in reviewing a class's performance and in
providing a basis for comparison with other investment alternatives.
However, each class's yield fluctuates, unlike investments that pay a fixed
interest rate over a stated period of time. When comparing investment
alternatives, investors should also note the quality and maturity of the
portfolio securities of respective investment companies they have chosen to
consider.
Investors should recognize that in periods of declining interest rates, a
class's yield will tend to be somewhat higher than prevailing market rates,
and in periods of rising interest rates, a class's yield will tend to be
somewhat lower. Also, when interest rates are falling, the inflow of net
new money to the fund from the continuous sale of its shares will likely be
invested in instruments producing lower yields than the balance of the
fund's holdings, thereby reducing a class's current yield. In periods of
rising interest rates, the opposite can be expected to occur.
Tax-equivalent yield is the rate an investor would have to earn from a
fully taxable investment before taxes to equal a class's tax-free yield.
Tax-equivalent yields are calculated by dividing a class's yield by the
result of one minus a stated federal or combined federal and state tax
rate. If only a portion of a class's yield is tax-exempt, only that portion
is adjusted in the calculation.
The following table shows the effect of a shareholder's tax status on
effective yield under federal income tax laws for 1996. It shows the
approximate yield a taxable security must provide at various income
brackets to produce after-tax yields equivalent to those of hypothetical
tax-exempt obligations yielding from 4% to    10    %. Of course, no
assurance can be given that a class will achieve any specific tax-exempt
yield. While the fund invests principally in obligations whose interest is
exempt from federal income tax, other income received by the fund may be
taxable. 
1996 TAX RATES AND TAX-EQUIVALENT YIELDS
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                <C>                <C>       <C>     <C>     <C>     <C>      <C>      <C>             <C>             
                                     Federal    If individual tax-exempt yield is:                                       
 
Taxable Income*                      Income     4%      5%      6%      7%      8%        9%              10%   
                                     Tax                                                                 
 
Single Return      Joint Return      Bracket**  Then taxable-equivalent yield is:                                       
 
$0-24,000          $0-40,100          15.0%     4.71%   5.88%   7.06%    8.24%   9.41%       10.59    %      11.76    %   
 
$24,001-58,150     $40,101-96,900     28.0%     5.56%   6.94%   8.33%    9.72%   11.11%   12.50%          13.89%          
 
$58,151-121,300    $96,901-147,700    31.0%     5.80%   7.25%   8.70%   10.14%   11.59%   13.04%          14.49%          
 
$121,301-263,750   $147,701-263,750   36.0%     6.25%   7.81%   9.38%   10.94%   12.50%   14.06%          15.63%          
 
$263,751-above     $263,751-above     39.6%     6.62%   8.28%   9.93%   11.59%   13.25%   14.90%          16.56%          
 
</TABLE>
 
* Net amount subject to federal income tax after deductions and exemptions.
Assumes ordinary income only.
** Excludes the impact of the phaseout of personal exemptions, limitations
on itemized deductions, and other credits, exclusions, and adjustments
which may increase a taxpayer's marginal tax rate. An increase in a
shareholder's marginal tax rate would increase that shareholder's
tax-equivalent yield.
The fund may invest a portion of its assets in obligations that are subject
to federal income tax. When the fund invests in these obligations, its
tax-equivalent yields will be lower. In the table above, tax-equivalent
yields are calculated assuming investments are 100% federally tax-free.
TOTAL RETURN CALCULATIONS. Total returns quoted in advertising reflect all
aspects of a class's return, including the effect of reinvesting dividends
and capital gain distributions, and any change in a class's NAV over a
stated period. Average annual total returns are calculated by determining
the growth or decline in value of a hypothetical historical investment
   in a class     over a stated period, and then calculating the annually
compounded percentage rate that would have produced the same result if the
rate of growth or decline in value had been constant over the period. For
example, a cumulative total return of 100% over ten years would produce an
average annual total return of 7.18%, which is the steady annual rate of
return that would equal 100% growth on a compounded basis in ten years.
While average annual total returns are a convenient means of comparing
investment alternatives, investors should realize that a class's
performance is not constant over time, but changes from year to year, and
that average annual total returns represent averaged figures as opposed to
the actual year-to-year performance    of a class    .
In addition to average annual total returns, a class may quote unaveraged
or cumulative total returns reflecting the simple change in value of an
investment over a stated period. Average annual and cumulative total
returns may be quoted as a percentage or as a dollar amount, and may be
calculated for a single investment, a series of investments, or a series of
redemptions, over any time period. Total returns may be broken down into
their components of income and capital (including capital gains and changes
in share price) in order to illustrate the relationship of these factors
and their contributions to total return. Total returns may be quoted on a
before-tax or after-tax basis. Total returns, yields, and other performance
information may be quoted numerically or in a table, graph, or similar
illustration.
NET ASSET VALUE. Charts and graphs using NAVs, adjusted NAVs, and benchmark
indices may be used to exhibit performance. An adjusted NAV includes any
distributions paid and reflects all elements of return. Unless otherwise
indicated, adjusted NAVs are not adjusted for sales charges, if any.
The following tables and charts show performance for each class of shares
of the fund. Class A shares have a maximum 3.50% front-end sales charge and
are also subject to a 0.25% 12b-1 fee. Class B shares have a maximum 4.00%
contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) upon redemption and are also
subject to a    0.90% 12b-1 fee, including a     0.65%    distribution    
fee,    and     a 0.25% shareholder services fee. Institutional Class
shares do not have a sales charge or a 12b-1 fee.
HISTORICAL FUND RESULTS. The following table shows yield, tax-equivalent
yield, and total returns for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class for
the periods ended December 31, 1995. The tax-equivalent yield is based on a
36% federal income tax rate. Note that the fund may invest in securities
whose income is subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>    <C>           <C>           <C>            <C>           <C>             <C>              <C>              <C>               
                                   Average Annual Total Returns1                 Cumulative Total Returns1               
 
       Thirty-Da     Tax-          One            Five          Ten             One              Five             Ten               
       y             Equivalent    Year           Years         Years           Year             Years            Years             
       Yield2        Yield2                                                                                                     
 
                                                                                                                                  
 
Municipal 
Bond -     4.42    %     6.91    %     14.02    %     7.56    %     8.34    %       14.02    %       43.94    %       122.82    %   
Class A              
 
Municipal 
Bond -     4.58    %     7.16    %     15.15    %     8.33    %     8.73    %       15.15    %       49.17    %       130.90    %   
Class B               
 
Municipal 
Bond -     4.58    %     7.16    %     18.15    %     8.33    %     8.73    %       18.15    %       49.17    %       130.90    %   
Institutional Class                                            
 
</TABLE>
 
1 Average annual and cumulative total returns for Class A shares include
the effect of paying Class A's maximum front-end sales charge of 3.50%.
Average annual and cumulative total returns for Class B shares include the
effect of paying Class B's applicable CDSC upon redemption based on the
following schedule: less than one year, 4%; one year to less than two
years, 3%; two years to less than three years, 3%; three years to less than
four years, 2%; four years to less than five years, 1%; and five years and
greater, 0%. Class A, Class B and Institutional Class returns prior to July
   1    , 1996, reflect the performance of the Initial Class, the original
class of the fund, which class does not have a sales charge or a 12b-1
fee.    Class A and Class B returns would have been lower had 12b-1 fees
been included.    
2 Y   ields and tax-equivalent yields shown for Class A shares include the
effect of the Class A maximum front-end sales charge, but do not include
the effect of the applicable 12b-1 fee, and would have been lower if it had
been taken into account. Yields and tax-equivalent yields shown for Class B
shares do not include the effect of the CDSC and the applicable 12b-1 fee,
and would have been lower if they had been taken into account. Yields and
tax-equivalent yields shown for Class I shares are those of Advisor
Municipal Bond Initial Class.    
The following tables show the income and capital elements of the cumulative
total return for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class of the fund. The
tables compare each class's return to the record of the Standard &
Poor's        500    Index     (S&P 500(registered trademark)), the Dow
Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), and the cost of living (measured by the
Consumer Price Index, or CPI) over the same period. The CPI information is
as of the month-end closest to the initial investment date for the fund.
The S&P 500 and DJIA comparisons are provided to show how each class's
total return compared to the record of a broad average of common stocks and
a narrower set of stocks of major industrial companies, respectively, over
the same period. Of course, since the fund invests in fixed-income
securities, common stocks represent a different type of investment from the
fund. Common stocks generally offer greater growth potential than the fund,
but generally experience greater price volatility, which means greater
potential for loss. In addition, common stocks generally provide lower
income than a fixed-income investment such as the fund. Figures for the S&P
500 and DJIA are based on the prices of unmanaged groups of stocks and,
unlike the classes' returns, do not include the effect of paying brokerage
commissions or other costs of investing.
The following charts show the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 investment
in each class of the fund, assuming all distributions were reinvested and
including the effect of the fund's Class A maximum front-end sales charge,
but not including Class A shares' or Class B shares' applicable 12b-1 fees.
Had the applicable 12b-1 fees been included, the value of an investment in
Class A shares or Class B shares would have been lower   .     This was a
period of fluctuating interest rates and bond prices and the figures below
should not be considered representative of the dividend income or capital
gain or loss that could be realized from an investment in the    class    
today.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>           <C>               <C>              <C>              <C>               <C>        <C>               <C>        
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS A                                                       INDICES               
 
Year ended    Value of          Value of         Value of         Total             S&P 500    DJIA              Cost of    
December 31   Initial           Reinvested       Reinvested       Value                                          Living     
              $10,000           Dividend         Capital Gain                                                               
              Investment        Distributions    Distributions                                                              
 
                                                                                                                            
 
                                                                                                                            
 
                                                                                                                            
 
1995          $    10,755       $    9,739       $    1,788       $    22,282       $ 40,054   $    45,581       $ 14,044   
 
1994              9,585             7,690            1,584            18,859         29,114     33,338            13,696    
 
1993              11,302            7,849            1,457            20,608         28,735     31,759            13,339    
 
1992              11,055            6,639            516              18,210         26,104     27,146            12,983    
 
1991              11,016            5,564            137              16,717         24,251     25,300            12,617    
 
1990              10,573            4,365            0                14,938         18,585     20,347            12,242    
 
1989              10,573            3,399            0                13,972         19,183     20,457            11,537    
 
1988              10,339            2,414            0                12,753         14,567     15,526            11,025    
 
1987              9,884             1,472            0                11,356         12,492     13,394            10,558    
 
1986              10,768            767              0                11,535         11,868     12,703            10,110    
 
</TABLE>
 
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on
   December 31, 1985    , the net amount invested in Class A shares was
$10,000. The cost of the initial investment ($10,000), together with the
aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions for
the period covered (their cash value at the time they were reinvested),
amounted to $   21,364    . If distributions had not been reinvested, the
amount of distributions earned from Class A over time would have been
smaller, and cash payments for the period would have amounted to
$   6,697     for dividends and $   1,046     for capital gains
distributions. Tax consequences of different investments have not been
factored into the above figures.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>             <C>               <C>               <C>                  <C>               <C>        <C>               <C>        
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS B                                                               INDICES               
 
Year ended      Value of          Value of             Value of           Total             S&P 500    DJIA              Cost of    
December 31**   Initial           Reinvested           Reinvested         Value                                          Living    
                $10,000           Dividend             Capital Gain                                                                 
                Investment        Distributions        Distributions                                                                
 
                                                                                                                                    
 
                                                                                                                                    
 
                                                                                                                                    
 
1995            $    11,146       $    10,091          $ 1,853             $    23,090       $ 40,054   $    45,581       $ 14,044  
 
1994                9,933             7,969             1,641                  19,543         29,114     33,338            13,696   
 
1993                11,712            8,134             1,510                  21,356         28,735     31,759            13,339   
 
1992                11,456            6,879             535                    18,870         26,104     27,146            12,983   
 
1991                11,415            5,766             142                    17,323         24,251     25,300            12,617   
 
1990                10,957            4,523             0                      15,480         18,585     20,347            12,242   
 
1989                10,957            3,522             0                      14,479         19,183     20,457            11,537   
 
1988                10,714            2,501             0                      13,215         14,567     15,526            11,025   
 
1987                10,243            1,524             0                      11,767         12,492     13,394            10,558   
 
1986                11,159            795               0                      11,954         11,868     12,703            10,110   
 
</TABLE>
 
   ** After a holding period of six years, Class B shares automatically
convert to Class A shares. Had the applicable class's 12b-1 fees been
reflected, the value of your investment would have been lower.    
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on
   December 31, 1985    , the net amount invested in Class B shares was
$10,000. The cost of the initial investment ($10,000), together with the
aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions for
the period covered (their cash value at the time they were reinvested),
amounted to $   21,786    . If distributions had not been reinvested, the
amount of distributions earned from Class B over time would have been
smaller, and cash payments for the period would have amounted to
$   6,940     for dividends and $   1,084     for capital gains
distributions. Tax consequences of different investments have not been
factored into the above figures.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>           <C>               <C>               <C>              <C>               <C>        <C>               <C>        
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS B                                                        INDICES               
 
Year ended    Value of          Value of          Value of         Total             S&P 500    DJIA              Cost of    
December 31   Initial           Reinvested        Reinvested       Value                                          Living     
              $10,000           Dividend          Capital Gain                                                               
              Investment        Distributions     Distributions                                                              
 
                                                                                                                             
 
                                                                                                                             
 
                                                                                                                             
 
1995          $    11,146       $    10,091       $    1,853       $    23,090       $ 40,054   $    45,581       $ 14,044   
 
1994              9,933             7,969             1,641            19,543         29,114     33,338            13,696    
 
1993              11,712            8,134             1,510            21,356         28,735     31,759            13,339    
 
1992              11,456            6,879             535              18,870         26,104     27,146            12,983    
 
1991              11,415            5,766             142              17,323         24,251     25,300            12,617    
 
1990              10,957            4,523             0                15,480         18,585     20,347            12,242    
 
1989              10,957            3,522             0                14,479         19,183     20,457            11,537    
 
1988              10,714            2,501             0                13,215         14,567     15,526            11,025    
 
1987              10,243            1,524             0                11,767         12,492     13,394            10,558    
 
1986              11,159            795               0                11,954         11,868     12,703            10,110    
 
</TABLE>
 
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on
   December 31, 1985    , the net amount invested in Institutional Class
shares was $10,000. The cost of the initial investment ($10,000), together
with the aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain
distributions for the period covered (their cash value at the time they
were reinvested), amounted to $   21,786    . If distributions had not been
reinvested, the amount of distributions earned from Institutional Class
over time would have been smaller, and cash payments for the period would
have amounted to $   6,940     for dividends and $   1,084     for capital
gains distributions. Tax consequences of different investments have not
been factored into the above figures.
PERFORMANCE COMPARISONS.    A class's p    erformance may be compared to
the performance of other mutual funds in general, or to the performance of
particular types of mutual funds. These comparisons may be expressed as
mutual fund rankings prepared by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. (Lipper),
an independent service located in Summit, New Jersey that monitors the
performance of mutual funds. Lipper generally ranks funds on the basis of
total return, assuming reinvestment of distributions, but does not take
sales charges or redemption fees into consideration, and is prepared
without regard to tax consequences. Lipper may also rank funds based on
yield. In addition to the mutual fund rankings,    a class's    
performance may be compared to stock, bond, and money market mutual fund
performance indices prepared by Lipper or other organizations. Each class
of the fund may be compared to the Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond Index, a
total return performance benchmark for the investment-grade municipal bond
market. Issues included in the Index have a minimum credit rating of Baa
and a maturity of at least one year. To be included in the Index, an issue
must have been issued after December 31, 1990 and have a total amount
outstanding of $50 million or more. Subsequent to December 31, 1995, zero
coupon bonds and issues subject to the alternative minimum tax are included
in the Index. When comparing these indices, it is important to remember the
risk and return characteristics of each type of investment. For example,
while stock mutual funds may offer higher potential returns, they also
carry the highest degree of share price volatility. Likewise, money market
funds may offer greater stability of principal, but generally do not offer
the higher potential returns available from stock mutual funds.
From time to time,    a class's     performance may also be compared to
other mutual funds tracked by financial or business publications and
periodicals. For example, the fund may quote Morningstar, Inc. in its
advertising materials. Morningstar, Inc. is a mutual fund rating service
that rates mutual funds on the basis of risk-adjusted performance. Rankings
that compare the performance of Fidelity funds to one another in
appropriate categories over specific periods of time may also be quoted in
advertising.
A class may be compared in advertising to Certificates of Deposit (CDs) or
other investments issued by banks or other depository institutions. Mutual
funds differ from bank investments in several respects. For example, the
fund may offer greater liquidity or higher potential returns than CDs, the
fund does not guarantee your principal or your return, and fund shares are
not FDIC insured.
Fidelity may provide information designed to help individuals understand
their investment goals and explore various financial strategies. Such
information may include information about current economic, market, and
political conditions; materials that describe general principles of
investing, such as asset allocation, diversification, risk tolerance, and
goal setting; questionnaires designed to help create a personal financial
profile; worksheets used to project savings needs based on assumed rates of
inflation and hypothetical rates of return; and action plans offering
investment alternatives. Materials may also include discussions of
Fidelity's asset allocation funds and other Fidelity funds, products, and
services.
Ibbotson Associates of Chicago, Illinois (Ibbotson) provides historical
returns of the capital markets in the United States, including common
stocks, small capitalization stocks, long-term corporate bonds,
intermediate-term government bonds, long-term government bonds, Treasury
bills, the U.S. rate of inflation (based on the CPI), and combinations of
various capital markets. The performance of these capital markets is based
on the returns of different indices. 
Fidelity funds may use the performance of these capital markets in order to
demonstrate general risk-versus-reward investment scenarios. Performance
comparisons may also include the value of a hypothetical investment in any
of these capital markets. The risks associated with the security types in
any capital market may or may not correspond directly to those of the
funds. Ibbotson calculates total returns in the same method as the funds.
The funds may also compare performance to that of other compilations or
indices that may be developed and made available in the future. 
A fund may compare its performance or the performance of securities in
which it may invest to averages published by IBC USA (Publications), Inc.
of Ashland, Massachusetts. These averages assume reinvestment of
distributions. The IBC/Donoghue's MONEY FUND AVERAGES(trademark)/All
Tax-Free, which is reported in the MONEY FUND REPORT(registered trademark),
covers over 395 Tax-Free money market funds. The Bond Fund Report
AverageS(trademark)/Municipal, which is reported in the BOND FUND
REPORT(registered trademark), covers over 509 bond funds. When evaluating
comparisons to money market funds, investors should consider the relevant
differences in investment objectives and policies. Specifically, money
market funds invest in short-term, high-quality instruments and seek to
maintain a stable $1.00 share price. The fund, however, invests in
longer-term instruments and its share price changes daily in response to a
variety of factors.
The fund may compare and contrast in advertising the relative advantages of
investing in a mutual fund versus an individual municipal bond. Unlike
tax-free mutual funds, individual municipal bonds offer a stated rate of
interest and, if held to maturity, repayment of principal. Although some
individual municipal bonds might offer a higher return, they do not offer
the reduced risk of a mutual fund that invests in many different
securities. The initial investment requirements and sales charges of many
tax-free mutual funds are lower than the purchase cost of individual
municipal bonds, which are generally issued in $5,000 denominations and are
subject to direct brokerage costs.
In advertising materials, Fidelity may reference or discuss its products
and services, which may include: other Fidelity funds; retirement
investing; model portfolios or allocations; and saving for college or other
goals. In addition, Fidelity may quote or reprint financial or business
publications or periodicals as they relate to current economic and
political conditions, fund management, portfolio composition, investment
philosophy, investment techniques, the desirability of owning a particular
mutual fund, and Fidelity services and products.
   The     fund may be advertised as part of certain asset allocation
programs involving other Fidelity or non-Fidelity mutual funds. These asset
allocation programs may advertise a model portfolio and its performance
results.
   The     fund may be advertised as part of a no transaction fee (NTF)
program in which Fidelity and non-Fidelity mutual funds are offered. An NTF
program may advertise performance results.
The fund may present its fund number, Quotron(trademark) number, and CUSIP
number, and discuss or quote its current portfolio manager.
VOLATILITY.    The fund     may quote various measures of volatility and
benchmark correlation in advertising. In addition, the fund may compare
these measures to those of other funds. Measures of volatility seek to
compare a class's historical share price fluctuations or total returns to
those of a benchmark. Measures of benchmark correlation indicate how valid
a comparative benchmark may be. All measures of volatility and correlation
are calculated using averages of historical data. In advertising, the fund
may also discuss or illustrate examples of interest rate sensitivity.
MOMENTUM INDICATORS indicate a class's price movements over specific
periods of time. Each point on the momentum indicator represents a class's
percentage change in price movements over that period.
   The fund may advertise e    xamples of the effects of periodic
investment plans, including the principle of dollar cost averaging   .    
In such a program, an investor invests a fixed dollar amount in a class at
periodic intervals, thereby purchasing fewer shares when prices are high
and more shares when prices are low. While such a strategy does not assure
a profit or guard against loss in a declining market, the investor's
average cost per share can be lower than if fixed numbers of shares are
purchased at the same intervals. In evaluating such a plan, investors
should consider their    willingness     to continue purchasing shares
during periods of low price levels.
As of    April 30, 1996,     FMR advised over $2   5    .5 billion in
tax-free fund assets, $8   2     billion in money market fund assets,
$2   71     billion in equity fund assets, $   53     billion in
international fund assets, and $23 billion in Spartan fund assets. The fund
may reference the growth and variety of money market mutual funds and the
adviser's innovation and participation in the industry. The equity funds
under management figure represents the largest amount of equity fund assets
under management by a mutual fund investment adviser in the United States,
making FMR America's leading equity (stock) fund manager. FMR, its
subsidiaries, and affiliates maintain a worldwide information and
communications network for the purpose of researching and managing
investments abroad.
In addition to performance rankings, the fund may compare each class's
total expense ratio to the average total expense ratio of similar funds
tracked by Lipper. A class's total expense ratio is a significant factor in
comparing bond and money market investments because of its effect on yield. 
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE, EXCHANGE, AND REDEMPTION INFORMATION
   The fund is open for business and the NAV of each class is calculated
each day the NYSE is open for trading. The NYSE has designated the
following holiday closings for 1996: New Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good
Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and
Christmas Day. Although FMR expects the same holiday schedule to be
observed in the future, the NYSE may modify its holiday schedule at any
time. In addition, the fund will not process wire purchases and redemptions
on days when the Federal Reserve Wire System is closed.    
CLASS A SHARES ONLY
Pursuant to Rule 22d-1 under the 1940 Act, FDC exercises its right to waive
Class A's maximum 3.50% front-end sales charge in connection with the
fund's merger with or acquisition of any investment company or trust. In
addition, FDC has chosen to waive Class A's front-end sales charge in
certain instances because of efficiencies involved in those sales of
shares. The sales charge will not apply:
1. to shares purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative,
or other employee (and their immediate families) of investment
professionals under special arrangements in connection with FDC's sales
activities;
2. to shares purchased by a current or former Trustee or officer of a
Fidelity fund or a current or retired officer, director, or regular
employee of FMR Corp. or its direct or indirect subsidiaries (a Fidelity
Trustee or employee), the spouse of a Fidelity Trustee or employee, a
Fidelity Trustee or employee acting as custodian for a minor child, or a
person acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child
of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;
3. to shares purchased by a charitable organization (as defined in Section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) investing $100,000 or more;
4. to shares purchased for a charitable remainder trust or life income pool
established for the benefit of a charitable organization (as defined by
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code);
5. to shares in a Fidelity IRA or Fidelity Advisor IRA account purchased
(including purchases by exchange) with the proceeds of a distribution from
an employee benefit plan having more than 200 eligible employees or a
minimum of $3,000,000 in plan assets invested in Fidelity mutual funds or
$1,000,000 invested in Fidelity Advisor mutual funds;
6. to shares purchased by an insurance company separate account used to
fund annuity contracts purchased by employee benefit plans (including
403(b) programs, but otherwise as defined in ERISA)), which, in the
aggregate, have either more than 200 eligible employees or a minimum of
$1,000,000 in assets invested in Fidelity Advisor funds; 
7. to shares purchased by any state, county, city, or government
instrumentality, department or authority or agency;
8. to shares purchased with redemption proceeds from other mutual fund
complexes on which the investor has paid a front-end or contingent deferred
sales charge;
9. to shares purchased by a trust institution or bank trust department,
excluding assets described in (11) and (12) below, that has executed a
Participation Agreement with FDC specifying certain asset minimums and
qualifications, and marketing program restrictions. Assets managed by third
parties do not qualify for this waiver;
10. to shares purchased for use in a broker-dealer managed account program,
provided the broker-dealer has executed a participation agreement with FDC
specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing,
program and trading restrictions. Employee benefit plan assets do not
qualify for this waiver;
11. to shares purchased as part of an employee benefit plan having more
than (i) 200 eligible employees or a minimum of $1,000,000 in plan assets
invested in the Fidelity Advisor funds, or (ii) 25 eligible employees or
$250,000 in plan assets invested in Fidelity Advisor funds that subscribes
to Fidelity Advisor Retirement Connection or similar program sponsored by
Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Company, Inc.;
12. to shares purchased as part of an employee benefit plan through an
intermediary that has executed a Participation Agreement with FDC
specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing,
program and trading restrictions;
13. to shares purchased on a discretionary basis by a registered investment
adviser which is not part of an organization primarily engaged in the
brokerage business, that has executed a Participation Agreement with FDC
specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing,
program and trading restrictions. Employee benefit plan assets do not
qualify for this waiver; or
14. to shares purchased with distributions of income, principal, and
capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts.
In order to qualify for waivers (9), (10) and (13), eligible investors with
existing Class A accounts will be required to sign and comply with a
Participation Agreement. Eligible investors that do not meet revised asset
requirements specified in the Participation Agreement will be allowed to
continue investing in Class A shares under the terms of their current
relationship until June 30, 1997, after which they will be prevented from
making new or subsequent purchases in Class A load waived, except that
employee benefit plans will be permitted to make additional purchases of
Class A shares load waived.
A sales load waiver form must accompany these transactions.
   For the purposes of qualifying for waiver (11), employee benefit plans
subscribing to the Premiere Retirement Savings Plan Program offered by
National Financial Correspondent Services may be aggregated.    
FINDERS FEE. On eligible purchases of Class A shares in amounts of $1
million or more, investment professionals will be compensated with a fee of
0.25%. Eligible purchases are the following purchases made through
broker-dealers and banks (excluding trust departments): an individual trade
of $1 million or more; a trade which brings the value of the accumulated
account(s) of an investor (including an employee benefit plan) past $1
million; a trade for an investor with an accumulated account value of $1
million or more; and an incremental trade toward an investor's $1 million
"Letter of Intent." 
Any assets in relation to which an investment professional has received
such compensation will bear a Class A CDSC if they do not remain in Class A
shares of the Fidelity Advisor funds, Initial Class shares of Daily Money
Fund: U.S. Treasury Portfolio or Daily Money Fund: Money Market Portfolio,
or shares of Daily Tax-Exempt Money Fund, for a period of at least one
uninterrupted year. The Class A CDSC will be 0.25% of the lesser of the
cost of the shares at the initial date of purchase or the value of the
shares at redemption, not including any reinvested dividends or capital
gains. Class A CDSC shares representing reinvested dividends or capital
gains, if any, will be redeemed first, followed by other Class A CDSC
shares that have been held for the longest period of time.
With respect to employee benefit plans, the Class A CDSC does not apply to
the following types of redemptions: (i) plan loans or distributions or (ii)
exchanges to non-Advisor fund investment options. With respect to
Individual Retirement Accounts, the Class A CDSC does not apply to
redemptions made for disability, payment of death benefits, or required
partial distributions starting at age 70 1/2.
CLASS B SHARES ONLY
The        CDSC        on Class B shares may be waived in the case of (1)
disability or death, provided that the redemption is made within one year
following the death or initial determination of disability; or (2) in
connection with a total or partial redemption made in connection with
distributions from retirement plan accounts at age 70 1/2, which are
permitted without penalty pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code.
A sales load waiver form must accompany these transactions.
CLASS A AND CLASS B SHARES ONLY
QUANTITY DISCOUNTS. To obtain a reduction of the front-end sales charge on
Class A shares, you or your investment professional must notify the
transfer agent at the time of purchase whenever a quantity discount is
applicable to your purchase. Upon such notification, you will receive the
lowest applicable front-end sales charge.
For purposes of qualifying for a reduction in front-end sales charges under
the Combined Purchase, Rights of Accumulation, or Letter of Intent
programs, the following may qualify as an individual or a "company" as
defined in Section 2(a)(8) of the 1940 Act: an individual, spouse, and
their children under age 21 purchasing for his, her, or their own account;
a trustee, administrator or other fiduciary purchasing for a single trust
estate or a single fiduciary account or for a single or a parent-subsidiary
group of "employee benefits plans" (as defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA);
and tax-exempt organizations as defined under Section 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code.
RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION permit reduced front-end sales charges on any future
purchases of Class A shares after you have reached a new breakpoint in the
fund's sales charge schedule. The value of currently held Fidelity Advisor
fund Class A and Class B shares, Initial Class shares and Class B shares of
Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury Portfolio, Initial Class shares of Daily
Money Fund: Money Market Portfolio, and shares of Daily Tax-Exempt Money
Fund acquired by exchange from any Fidelity Advisor fund, is determined at
the current day's NAV at the close of business, and is added to the amount
of your new purchase valued at the current offering price to determine your
reduced front-end sales charge.
LETTER OF INTENT. You may obtain Class A shares at the same reduced
front-end sales charge by filing a non-binding Letter of Intent (the
Letter) within 90 days of the start of Class A purchases. Each Class A
investment you make after signing the Letter will be entitled to the
front-end sales charge applicable to the total investment indicated in the
Letter. For example, a $2,500 purchase of Class A shares toward a $50,000
Letter would receive the same reduced sales charge as if the $50,000   
    had been invested at one time. To ensure that you receive a reduced
front-end sales charge on future purchases, you or your investment
professional must inform the transfer agent that the Letter is in effect
each time Class A shares are purchased. Reinvested income and capital gain
distributions do not count toward the completion of the Letter.
Your initial investment must be at least 5% of the total amount you plan to
invest. Out of the initial purchase, 5% of the dollar amount specified in
the Letter will be registered in your name and held in escrow. The Class A
shares held in escrow cannot be redeemed or exchanged until the Letter is
satisfied or the additional sales charges have been paid. You will earn
income dividends and capital gain distributions on escrowed Class A shares.
The escrow will be released when your purchase of the total amount has been
completed. You are not obligated to complete the Letter.
If you purchase more than the amount specified in the Letter and qualify
for a future front-end sales charge reduction, the front-end sales charge
will be adjusted to reflect your total purchase at the end of 13 months.
Surplus funds will be applied to the purchase of additional Class A shares
at the then-current offering price applicable to the total purchase.
If you do not complete your purchase under the Letter within the 13-month
period, 30 days' written notice will be provided for you to pay the
increased front-end sales charges due. Otherwise, sufficient escrowed Class
A shares will be redeemed to pay such charges.
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PROGRAM. You can make regular
investments in Class A or Class B shares of the fund with the Systematic
Investment Program by completing the appropriate section of the account
application and attaching a voided personal check with your bank's magnetic
ink coding number across the front. If your bank account is jointly owned,
be sure that all owners sign.
Your account will be drafted on or about the first business day of every
month. You may cancel your participation in the Systematic Investment
Program at any time without payment of a cancellation fee. You will receive
a confirmation from the transfer agent for every transaction, and a debit
entry will appear on your bank statement.
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PROGRAM. If you own Class A shares
worth $10,000 or more, you can have monthly, quarterly or semiannual checks
sent from your account to you, to a person named by you, or to your bank
checking account. Your Systematic Withdrawal Program payments are drawn
from Class A share redemptions. If Systematic Withdrawal P   rogram    
redemptions exceed income dividends earned on your shares, your account
eventually may be exhausted. 
CLASS A, CLASS B, AND INSTITUTIONAL CLASS SHARES
The fund is open for business and the NAV and, where applicable, the
offering price, for each class is calculated each day the NYSE is open for
trading. The NYSE has designated the following holiday closings for 1996:
New Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence
Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. Although FMR expects
the same holiday schedule to be observed in the future, the NYSE may modify
its holiday schedule at any time. In addition, the fund will not process
wire purchases and redemptions on days when the Federal Reserve Wire System
is closed.
FSC normally determines each class's NAV as of the close of the NYSE
(normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). However, NAV may be calculated earlier
if trading on the NYSE is restricted or as permitted by the SEC. To the
extent that portfolio securities are traded in other markets on days when
the NYSE is closed, a class's NAV may be affected on days when investors do
not have access to the fund to purchase or redeem shares. In addition,
trading in some of the fund's portfolio securities may not occur on days
when the fund is open for business.
If the Trustees determine that existing conditions make cash payments
undesirable, redemption payments may be made in whole or in part in
securities or other property, valued for this purpose as they are valued in
computing each class's NAV. Shareholders receiving securities or other
property on redemption may realize a gain or loss for tax purposes, and
will incur any costs of sale, as well as the associated inconveniences.
Pursuant to Rule 11a-3 under the 1940 Act, the fund is required to give
shareholders at least 60 days' notice prior to terminating or modifying its
exchange privilege. Under the Rule, the 60-day notification requirement may
be waived if (i) the only effect of a modification would be to reduce or
eliminate an administrative fee, redemption fee, or deferred sales charge
ordinarily payable at the time of an exchange, or (ii) the fund suspends
the redemption of the shares to be exchanged as permitted under the 1940
Act or the rules and regulations thereunder, or the fund to be acquired
suspends the sale of its shares because it is unable to invest amounts
effectively in accordance with its investment objective and policies.
In the Prospectus, the fund has notified shareholders that it reserves the
right at any time, without prior notice, to refuse exchange purchases by
any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be unable to
invest effectively in accordance with its investment objective and
policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely affected.
DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
DISTRIBUTIONS. If you request to have distributions mailed to you and the
U.S. Postal Service cannot deliver your checks, or if your checks remain
uncashed for six months, Fidelity may reinvest your distributions at the
then-current NAV. All subsequent distributions will then be reinvested
until you provide Fidelity with alternate instructions.
DIVIDENDS. To the extent that the fund's income is designated as federally
tax-exempt interest, the daily dividends declared by the fund are also
federally tax-exempt. Short-term capital gains are distributed as dividend
income, but do not qualify for the dividends-received deduction. These
gains will be taxed as ordinary income. The fund will send each shareholder
a notice in January describing the tax status of dividend and capital gain
distributions (if any) for the prior year. 
Shareholders are required to report tax-exempt income on their federal tax
returns. Shareholders who earn other income, such as Social Security
benefits, may be subject to federal income tax on up to 85% of such
benefits to the extent that their income, including tax-exempt income,
exceeds certain base amounts.
The fund purchases municipal securities    whose interest FMR believes is
free from federal income tax    . Generally   ,     issuers or other
parties    have entered into covenants requiring continuous compliance with
    federal tax requirements    to preserve the tax-free status of interest
payments over the life of the security    . If at any time the covenants
are not complied with,    or if the IRS otherwise determines that the
issuer did not comply with the relevant tax requirements,     interest
   payments from     a security could become federally taxable retroactive
to the date the security was issued. For certain types of structure   d    
securities,    the tax status of the pass-through of tax-free income may
also be based on the federal tax treatment of the structure.    
As a result of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, interest on certain "private
activity" securities is subject to the federal alternative minimum tax
(AMT), although the interest continues to be excludable from gross income
for other tax purposes. Interest from private activity securities will be
considered tax-exempt for purposes of the fund's policies of investing   
    at least 80% of its assets are invested in municipal securities whose
interest is free from federal income tax. Interest from private activity
securities is a tax preference item for the purposes of determining whether
a taxpayer is subject to the AMT and the amount of AMT to be paid, if any.
Private activity securities issued after August 7, 1986 to benefit a
private or industrial user or to finance a private facility are affected by
this rule. 
A portion of the gain on bonds purchased with market discount after April
30, 1993 and short-term capital gains distributed by the fund are taxable
to shareholders as dividends, not as capital gains.
Corporate investors should note that a tax preference item for purposes of
the corporate AMT is 75% of the amount by which adjusted current earnings
(which includes tax-exempt interest) exceeds the alternative minimum
taxable income of the corporation. If a shareholder receives an
exempt-interest dividend and sells shares at a loss after holding them for
a period of six months or less, the loss will be disallowed to the extent
of the amount of the exempt-interest dividend. 
CAPITAL GAIN DISTRIBUTIONS. Long-term capital gains earned by the fund on
the sale of securities and distributed to shareholders are federally
taxable as long-term capital gains, regardless of the length of time
shareholders have held their shares. If a shareholder receives a long-term
capital gain distribution on shares of the fund, and such shares are held
six months or less and are sold at a loss, the portion of the loss equal to
the amount of the long-term capital gain distribution will be considered a
long-term loss for tax purposes. Short-term capital gains distributed by
the fund are taxable to shareholders as dividends, not as capital gains. 
As of December 31, 1995, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $27,853,000. This loss carryforward will expire on December
31, 2003 and is available to offset future capital gains.
TAX STATUS OF THE FUND. The fund intends to qualify each year as a
"regulated investment company" for tax purposes so that it will not be
liable for federal tax on income and capital gains distributed to
shareholders. In order to qualify as a regulated investment company and
avoid being subject to federal income or excise taxes at the fund level,
the fund intends to distribute substantially all of its net investment
income and net realized capital gains within each calendar year as well as
on a fiscal year basis. The fund intends to comply with other tax rules
applicable to regulated investment companies, including a requirement that
capital gains from the sale of securities held less than three months
constitute less than 30% of the fund's gross income for each fiscal year.
Gains from some futures contracts and options are included in this 30%
calculation, which may limit the fund's investments in such instruments.
The fund is treated as a separate entity from the other funds of Fidelity
Municipal Trust for tax purposes.
OTHER TAX INFORMATION. The information above is only a summary of some of
the tax consequences generally affecting the fund and its shareholders, and
no attempt has been made to discuss individual tax consequences. In
addition to federal income taxes, shareholders may be subject to state and
local taxes on fund distributions, and shares may be subject to state and
local personal property taxes. Investors should consult their tax advisers
to determine whether the fund is suitable to their particular tax
situation.
FMR
All of the stock of FMR is owned by FMR Corp., its parent organized in
1972. The voting common stock of FMR Corp. is divided into two classes.
Class B is held predominantly by members of the Edward C. Johnson 3d family
and is entitled to 49% of the vote on any matter acted upon by the voting
common stock. Class A is held predominantly by non-Johnson family member
employees of FMR Corp. and its affiliates and is entitled to 51% of the
vote on any such matter. The Johnson family group and all other Class B
shareholders have entered into a shareholders' voting agreement under which
all Class B shares will be voted in accordance with the majority vote of
Class B shares. Under        the 1940 Act, control of a company is presumed
where one individual or group of individuals owns more than 25% of the
voting stock of that company. Therefore, through their ownership of voting
common stock and the execution of the shareholders' voting agreement,
members of the Johnson family may be deemed, under the 1940 Act, to form a
controlling group with respect to FMR Corp.
At present, the principal operating activities of FMR Corp. are those
conducted by three of its divisions as follows: FSC, which is the transfer
and shareholder servicing agent for certain of the funds advised by FMR;
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, which performs
shareholder servicing functions for institutional customers and funds sold
through intermediaries; and Fidelity Investments Retail Marketing Company,
which provides marketing services to various companies within the Fidelity
organization.
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that sets forth all employees'
fiduciary responsibilities regarding the funds, establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions. For example, all
personal trades in most securities require pre-clearance, and participation
in initial public offerings is prohibited. In addition, restrictions on the
timing of personal investing in relation to trades by Fidelity funds and on
short-term trading have been adopted.
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
The Trustees   , Members of the Advisory Board,     and executive officers
of the trust are listed below. Except as indicated, each individual has
held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the last
five years. All persons named as Trustees    and Members of the Advisory
Board     also serve in similar capacities for other funds advised by FMR.
The business address of each Trustee and officer who is an "interested
person" (as defined in the    1940     Act) is 82 Devonshire Street,
Boston, Massachusetts 02109, which is also the address of FMR. The business
address of all the other Trustees    and Members of the Advisory Board    
is Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 9235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-9235.
Those Trustees who are "interested persons" by virtue of their affiliation
with either the trust or FMR are indicated by an asterisk (*).
*EDWARD C. JOHNSON 3d (66), Trustee and President, is Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and a Director of FMR Corp.; a Director and Chairman of
the Board and of the Executive Committee of FMR; Chairman and a Director of
FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity
Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
*J. GARY BURKHEAD (55), Trustee and Senior Vice President, is President of
FMR; and President and a Director of FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity Management &
Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
RALPH F. COX (64), Trustee (1991), is a consultant to Western Mining
Corporation (1994). Prior to February 1994, he was President of Greenhill
Petroleum Corporation (petroleum exploration and production). Until March
1990, Mr. Cox was President and Chief Operating Officer of Union Pacific
Resources Company (exploration and production). He is a Director of
Sanifill Corporation (non-hazardous waste, 1993) and CH2M Hill Companies
(engineering). In addition, he serves on the Board of Directors of the
Texas State Chamber of Commerce, and he is a member of advisory boards of
Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin.
PHYLLIS BURKE DAVIS (64), Trustee (1992). Prior to her retirement in
September 1991, Mrs. Davis was the Senior Vice President of Corporate
Affairs of Avon Products, Inc. She is currently a Director of BellSouth
Corporation (telecommunications), Eaton Corporation (manufacturing, 1991),
and the TJX Companies, Inc. (retail stores), and previously served as a
Director of Hallmark Cards, Inc. (1985-1991) and Nabisco Brands, Inc. In
addition, she is a member of the President's Advisory Council of The
University of Vermont School of Business Administration.
RICHARD J. FLYNN (72), Trustee and Chairman of the non-interested Trustees,
is a financial consultant. Prior to September 1986, Mr. Flynn was Vice
Chairman and a Director of the Norton Company (manufacturer of industrial
devices). He is currently a Trustee of College of the Holy Cross and Old
Sturbridge Village, Inc., and he previously served as a Director of
Mechanics Bank (1971-1995).
E. BRADLEY JONES (68), Trustee. Prior to his retirement in 1984, Mr. Jones
was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of LTV Steel Company. He is a
Director of TRW Inc. (original equipment and replacement products),
Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (mining), Consolidated Rail Corporation, Birmingham
Steel Corporation, and RPM, Inc. (manufacturer of chemical products), and
he previously served as a Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (mining and
marketing, 1985-1995) and Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc. (1985-1995).
In addition, he serves as a Trustee of First Union Real Estate Investments,
a Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of the Cleveland Clinic
Foundation, a Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of University
School (Cleveland), and a Trustee of Cleveland Clinic Florida.
DONALD J. KIRK (63), Trustee, is Executive-in-Residence (1995) at Columbia
University Graduate School of Business and a financial consultant. From
1987 to January 1995, Mr. Kirk was a Professor at Columbia University
Graduate School of Business. Prior to 1987, he was Chairman of the
Financial Accounting Standards Board. Mr. Kirk is a Director of General Re
Corporation (reinsurance), and he previously served as a Director of
Valuation Research Corp. (appraisals and valuations, 1993-1995). In
addition, he serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National
Arts Stabilization Fund, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the
Greenwich Hospital Association, a Member of the Public Oversight Board of
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants' SEC Practice
Section (1995), and as a Public Governor of the National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. (1996).
*PETER S. LYNCH (53), Trustee, is Vice Chairman and Director of FMR (1992).
Prior to May 31, 1990, he was a Director of FMR and Executive Vice
President of FMR (a position he held until March 31, 1991); Vice President
of Fidelity Magellan Fund and FMR Growth Group Leader; and Managing
Director of FMR Corp. Mr. Lynch was also Vice President of Fidelity
Investments Corporate Services (1991-1992). He is a Director of W.R. Grace
& Co. (chemicals) and Morrison Knudsen Corporation (engineering and
construction). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College,
Massachusetts Eye & Ear Infirmary, Historic Deerfield (1989) and Society
for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, and as an Overseer of the
Museum of Fine Arts of Boston.
GERALD C. McDONOUGH (67), Trustee and Vice-Chairman of the non-interested
Trustees, is Chairman of G.M. Management Group (strategic advisory
services). Prior to his retirement in July 1988, he was Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of Leaseway Transportation Corp. (physical distribution
services). Mr. McDonough is a Director of ACME-Cleveland Corp. (metal
working, telecommunications and electronic products), Brush-Wellman Inc.
(metal refining), York International Corp. (air conditioning and
refrigeration), Commercial Intertech Corp. (water treatment equipment,
1992), and Associated Estates Realty Corporation (a real estate investment
trust, 1993).
EDWARD H. MALONE (71), Trustee. Prior to his retirement in 1985, Mr. Malone
was Chairman, General Electric Investment Corporation and a Vice President
of General Electric Company. He is a Director of Allegheny Power Systems,
Inc. (electric utility), General Re Corporation (reinsurance) and Mattel
Inc. (toy manufacturer). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of the Naples
Philharmonic Center for the Arts and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and
he is a member of the Advisory Boards of Butler Capital Corporation Funds
and Warburg, Pincus Partnership Funds.
MARVIN L. MANN (63), Trustee (1993), is Chairman of the Board, President,
and Chief Executive Officer of Lexmark International, Inc. (office
machines, 1991). Prior to 1991, he held the positions of Vice President of
International Business Machines Corporation ("IBM") and President and
General Manager of various IBM divisions and subsidiaries. Mr. Mann is a
Director of M.A. Hanna Company (chemicals, 1993) and Infomart (marketing
services, 1991), a Trammell Crow Co. In addition, he serves as the Campaign
Vice Chairman of the Tri-State United Way (1993) and is a member of the
University of Alabama President's Cabinet.
THOMAS R. WILLIAMS (67), Trustee, is President of The Wales Group, Inc.
(management and financial advisory services). Prior to retiring in 1987,
Mr. Williams served as Chairman of the Board of First Wachovia Corporation
(bank holding company), and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The
First National Bank of Atlanta and First Atlanta Corporation (bank holding
company). He is currently a Director of BellSouth Corporation
(telecommunications), ConAgra, Inc. (agricultural products), Fisher
Business Systems, Inc. (computer software), Georgia Power Company (electric
utility), Gerber Alley & Associates, Inc. (computer software), National
Life Insurance Company of Vermont, American Software, Inc., and AppleSouth,
Inc. (restaurants, 1992).
   WILLIAM O. MCCOY (62), Member of the Advisory Board (1996), is the Vice
President of Finance for the University of North Carolina (16-school
system, 1995). Prior to his retirement in December 1994, Mr. McCoy was Vice
Chairman of the Board of BellSouth Corporation (telecommunications) and
President of BellSouth Enterprises. He is currently a Director of Liberty
Corporation (holding company), Weeks Corporation of Atlanta (real estate,
1994), and Carolina Power and Light Company (electric utility, 1996).
Previously, he was a Director of First American Corporation (bank holding
company, 1979-1996). In addition, Mr. McCoy serves as a member of the Board
of Visitors for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1994) and
for the Kenan Flager Business School (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill).    
FRED L. HENNING, JR. (57), Vice President, is Vice President of Fidelity's
money market (1994) and fixed-income (1995) funds and Senior Vice President
of FMR Texas Inc.
ARTHUR S. LORING (48), Secretary, is Senior Vice President (1993) and
General Counsel of FMR, Vice President-Legal of FMR Corp., and Vice
President and Clerk of FDC.
KENNETH A. RATHGEBER (49), Treasurer (1995), is Treasurer of the Fidelity
funds and is an employee of FMR (1995). Before joining FMR, Mr. Rathgeber
was a Vice President of Goldman Sachs & Co. (1978-1995), where he served in
various positions, including Vice President of Proprietary Accounting
(1988-1992), Global Co-Controller (1992-1994), and Chief Operations Officer
of Goldman Sachs (Asia) LLC (1994-1995).
JOHN H. COSTELLO (49), Assistant Treasurer, is an employee of FMR.
LEONARD M. RUSH (50), Assistant Treasurer (1994), is an employee of FMR
(1994). Prior to becoming Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds, Mr.
Rush was Chief Compliance Officer of FMR Corp. (1993-1994) and Chief
Financial Officer of Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. (1990-1993).
The following table sets forth information describing the compensation of
each current Trustee of the fund for his or her services as trustee for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 1995.
      COMPENSATION TABLE               
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                       <C>             <C>                  <C>                 <C>             
Trustees                  Aggregate       Pension or           Estimated Annual    Total           
                          Compensation    Retirement           Benefits Upon       Compensation    
                          from            Benefits Accrued     Retirement from     from the Fund   
                          the Fund        as Part of Fund      the Fund            Complex*        
                                          Expenses from the    Complex*                            
                                          Fund Complex*                                            
 
J. Gary Burkhead **       $ 0             $ 0                  $ 0                 $ 0             
 
Ralph F. Cox               439             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Phyllis Burke Davis        429             5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
Richard J. Flynn           549             0                    52,000              160,500        
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d **    0               0                    0                   0              
 
E. Bradley Jones           439             5,200                49,400              128,000        
 
Donald J. Kirk             451             5,200                52,000              129,500        
 
Peter S. Lynch **          0               0                    0                   0              
 
Gerald C. McDonough        440             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Edward H. Malone           439             5,200                44,200              128,000        
 
Marvin L. Mann             439             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Thomas R. Williams         429             5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
</TABLE>
 
* Information is as of December 31, 1995 for 219 funds in the complex.
** Interested trustees of the fund are compensated by FMR.
The non-interested Trustees may elect to defer receipt of all or a
percentage of their annual fees in accordance with the terms of a Deferred
Compensation Plan (the "Plan"). Under the Plan, compensation deferred by a
Trustee is periodically adjusted as though an equivalent amount had been
invested and reinvested in shares of one or more funds in the complex
designated by such Trustee (designated securities). The amount paid to the
Trustee under the Plan will be determined based upon the performance of
such investments. Deferral of Trustees' fees in accordance with the Plan
will have a negligible effect on the fund's assets, liabilities, and net
income per share, and will not obligate the fund to retain the services of
any Trustee or to pay any particular level of compensation to the Trustee.
The fund may invest in such designated securities without shareholder
approval.
Under a retirement program adopted in July 1988, the non-interested
Trustees, upon reaching age 72, become eligible to participate in a
retirement program under which they receive payments during their lifetime
from a fund based on their basic trustee fees and length of service. The
obligation of a fund to make such payments is not secured or funded.
Trustees become eligible if, at the time of retirement, they have served on
the Board for at least five years. Currently, Messrs. Ralph S. Saul,
William R. Spaulding, Bertram H. Witham, and David L. Yunich, all former
non-interested Trustees, receive retirement benefits under the program.
On    May 31, 1996,     the Trustees and officers of the fund owned, in the
aggregate, less than 1% of the fund's total outstanding shares.
MANAGEMENT CONTRACT
The fund employs FMR to furnish investment advisory and other services.
Under its management contract with the fund, FMR acts as investment adviser
and, subject to the supervision of the Board of Trustees, directs the
investments of the fund in accordance with its investment objective,
policies, and limitations. FMR also provides the fund with all necessary
office facilities and personnel for servicing the fund's investments,
compensates all officers of the fund and all Trustees who are "interested
persons" of the trust or of FMR, and all personnel of the fund or FMR
performing services relating to research, statistical, and investment
activities.
In addition, FMR or its affiliates, subject to the supervision of the Board
of Trustees, provide the management and administrative services necessary
for the operation of the fund. These services include providing facilities
for maintaining the fund's organization; supervising relations with
custodians, transfer and pricing agents, accountants, underwriters, and
other persons dealing with the fund; preparing all general shareholder
communications and conducting shareholder relations; maintaining the fund's
records and the registration of the fund's shares under federal and state
laws; developing management and shareholder services for the fund; and
furnishing reports, evaluations, and analyses on a variety of subjects to
the Trustees.
In addition to the management fee payable to FMR and the fees payable to
UMB, the fund pays all of its expenses, without limitation, that are not
assumed by those parties. The fund pays for the typesetting, printing, and
mailing of its proxy materials to shareholders, legal expenses, and the
fees of the custodian, auditor and non-interested Trustees. Although the
fund's current management contract provides that the fund will pay for
typesetting, printing, and mailing prospectuses, statements of additional
information, notices, and reports to shareholders, the trust, on behalf of
the fund, has entered into a revised transfer agent agreement with UMB,
pursuant to which UMB bears the costs of providing these services to
existing shareholders. Other expenses paid by the fund include interest,
taxes, brokerage commissions, and the fund's proportionate share of
insurance premiums and Investment Company Institute dues. The fund is also
liable for such non-recurring expenses as may arise, including costs of any
litigation to which the fund may be a party, and any obligation it may have
to indemnify its officers and Trustees with respect to litigation.
FMR is the fund's manager pursuant to a management contract dated January
1, 1994, which was approved by shareholders on December 15, 1993.
For the services of FMR under the contract, the fund pays FMR a monthly
management fee composed of the sum of two elements: a group fee rate and an
individual fund fee rate.
The group fee rate is based on the monthly average net assets of all of the
registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts and
is calculated on a cumulative basis pursuant to the graduated fee rate
schedule shown below on the left. The schedule below on the right shows the
effective annual group fee rate at various asset levels, which is the
result of cumulatively applying the annualized rates on the left. For
example, the effective annual fee rate at $366.9 billion of group net
assets - the approximate level for Decembe   r     1995 - was .1482%, which
is the weighted average of the respective fee rates for each level of group
net assets up to $366.9 billion.
GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE   EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
Average Group     Annualized   Group Net        Effective Annual   
Assets            Rate         Assets           Fee Rate           
 
 0 - $3 billion   .3700%        $ 0.5 billion   .3700%             
 
 3 - 6            .3400          25             .2664              
 
 6 - 9            .3100          50             .2188              
 
 9 - 12           .2800          75             .1986              
 
 12 - 15          .2500          100            .1869              
 
 15 - 18          .2200          125            .1793              
 
 18 - 21          .2000          150            .1736              
 
 21 - 24          .1900          175            .1695              
 
 24 - 30          .1800          200            .1658              
 
 30 - 36          .1750          225            .1629              
 
 36 - 42          .1700          250            .1604              
 
 42 - 48          .1650          275            .1583              
 
 48 - 66          .1600          300            .1565              
 
 66 - 84          .1550          325            .1548              
 
 84 - 120         .1500          350            .1533              
 
 120 - 174        .1450          400            .1507              
 
 174 - 228        .1400                                            
 
 228 - 282        .1375                                            
 
 282 - 336        .1350                                            
 
 Over 336         .1325                                            
 
Prior to January 1, 1994, the group fee rate was based on a schedule with
breakpoints ending at .1400% for average group assets in excess of $174
billion. The group fee rate breakpoints shown above for average group
assets in excess of $120 billion and under $228 billion were voluntarily
adopted by FMR on January 1, 1992. The additional breakpoints shown above
for average group assets in excess of $228 billion were voluntarily adopted
by FMR on November 1, 1993. The fund's current management contract reflects
these extensions of the group fee rate schedule.
On August 1, 1994, FMR voluntarily revised the prior extensions to the
group fee rate schedule, and added new breakpoints for average group assets
in excess of $156 billion and under $372 billion as shown in the schedule
below. The revised group fee rate schedule was identical to the above
schedule for average group assets under $156 billion.
On January 1, 1996, FMR voluntarily added new breakpoints to the revised
schedule for average group assets in excess of $372 billion, pending
shareholder approval of a new management contract reflecting the revised
schedule and additional breakpoints. The revised group fee rate schedule
and the extensions provide for lower management fee rates as FMR's assets
under management increase. For average group assets in excess of $156
billion, the revised group fee rate schedule with additional breakpoints
voluntarily adopted by FMR is as follows:
GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE   EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
Average Group         Annualized   Group Net        Effective Annual   
Assets                Rate         Assets           Fee Rate           
 
 120 - $156 billion   .1450%        $ 150 billion   .1736%             
 
 156 - 192            .1400          175            .1690              
 
 192 - 228            .1350          200            .1652              
 
 228 - 264            .1300          225            .1618              
 
 264 - 300            .1275          250            .1587              
 
 300 - 336            .1250          275            .1560              
 
 336 - 372            .1225          300            .1536              
 
 372 - 408            .1200          325            .1514              
 
 408 - 444            .1175          350            .1494              
 
 444 - 480            .1150          375            .1476              
 
 480 - 516            .1125          400            .1459              
 
 Over 516             .1100          425            .1443              
 
                                     450            .1427              
 
                                     475            .1413              
 
                                     500            .1399              
 
                                     525            .1385              
 
                                     550            .1372              
 
The individual fund fee rate is    0    .25%. Based on the average group
net assets of the funds advised by FMR for December 1995, the annual
management fee rate would be calculated as follows:
Group Fee Rate         Individual Fund Fee Rate         Management Fee Rate   
 
 .1482%           +        0    .25%               =     .3982%                
 
On December 15, 1993, shareholders of the fund approved an increase in the
fund's individual fund fee rate from    0    .20% to    0    .25%.
One-twelfth of this annual management fee rate is applied to the fund's net
assets averaged for the most recent month, giving a dollar amount, which is
the fee for that month.
During the fiscal years ended December 31, 1995, 1994, and 1993, FMR
received $4,282,000, $4,605,000, and $4,677,000, respectively, for its
services as investment adviser to the fund. These fees were equivalent to
   0    .40%,    0    .41%, and    0    .37%, respectively, of the average
net assets of the fund for each of those years.
FMR may, from time to time, voluntarily reimburse all or a portion of a
class's operating expenses (exclusive of interest, taxes, brokerage
commissions,    and     extraordinary expenses). FMR retains the ability to
be repaid for these expense reimbursements in the amount that expenses fall
below the limit prior to the end of the fiscal year. Expense reimbursements
by FMR will increase a class's total returns and yield and repayment of the
reimbursement by a class will lower its total returns and yield.
   Effective July 1, 1996, FMR has voluntarily agreed, subject to revision
or termination, to reimburse Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class if
and to the extent that its aggregate operating expenses, including
management fees, are in excess of an annual rate of 1.00% (Class A), 1.65%
(Class B), and 0.75% (Institutional Class) of average net assets of the
applicable class.    
To comply with the California Code of Regulations, FMR will reimburse the
fund if and to the extent that the fund's aggregate annual operating
expenses exceed specified percentages of its average net assets. The
applicable percentages are 2 1/2% of the first $30 million, 2% of the next
$70 million, and 1 1/2% of average net assets in excess of $100 million.
When calculating the fund's expenses for purposes of this regulation, the
fund may exclude interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, and extraordinary
expenses, as well as a portion of its distribution plan expenses.
CONTRACTS WITH FMR AFFILIATES
UMB is the transfer agent for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class
shares of the fund. UMB has entered into sub-contract   s     with FIIOC,
an affiliate of FMR, under the terms of which FIIOC performs the processing
activities associated with providing transfer agent and shareholder
servicing functions for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class shares of
the fund. Under this arrangement FIIOC receives an annual account fee and
an asset-based fee based on account size and fund type for each retail
account and certain institutional accounts. With respect to certain
institutional retirement accounts, FIIOC receives an annual account fee and
an asset-based fee based on account type or fund type. These annual account
fees are subject to increase based on postal rate changes. FIIOC also
collects small account fees from certain accounts with balances of less
than $2,500. For accounts that FIIOC maintains on behalf of UMB, FIIOC
receives all such fees.
FIIOC bears the expense of typesetting, printing, and mailing prospectuses,
statements of additional information, and all other reports, notices, and
statements to shareholders, with the exception of proxy statements. Also,
FIIOC pays out-of-pocket expenses associated with transfer agent services.
UMB has an additional sub-contract with FSC   , an affiliate of FMR,    
pursuant to which FSC performs the calculations necessary to determine NAV
and dividends for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class of the fund,
and maintains the fund's accounting records. The annual fee rates for these
pricing and bookkeeping services are based on the fund's average net
assets, specifically, .0400% of the first $500 million of average net
assets and .0200% of average net assets in excess of $500 million. The fee
is limited to a minimum of $60,000 and a maximum of $800,000 per year.
Pricing and bookkeeping fees, including reimbursement for out-of-pocket
expenses, paid to FSC for the fiscal years ended 1995, 1994, and 1993 were
$346,000, $362,000, and $358,000 respectively.
The transfer agent fees and charges, and pricing and bookkeeping fees
described above are paid to FIIOC and FSC, respectively, by UMB, which is
entitled to reimbursement from the appropriate class    or     the fund, as
applicable, for these expenses.
The fund has a distribution agreement with FDC, a Massachusetts corporation
organized on July 18, 1960. FDC is a broker-dealer registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is a member of the National Association
of Securities Dealers, Inc. The distribution agreement calls for FDC to use
all reasonable efforts, consistent with its other business, to secure
purchasers for shares of the fund, which are continuously offered.
Promotional and administrative expenses in connection with the offer and
sale of shares are paid by FMR.
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLANS
The Trustees have approved Distribution and Service Plans on behalf of each
class of shares of the fund (the Plans) pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
1940 Act (the Rule). The Rule provides in substance that a mutual fund may
not engage directly or indirectly in financing any activity that is
primarily intended to result in the sale of shares of a fund except
pursuant to a plan approved on behalf of the fund under the Rule. The
Plans, as approved by the Trustees, allow Class A, Class B, and
Institutional Class shares of the fund and FMR to incur certain expenses
that might be considered to constitute    direct or     indirect payment by
the fund of distribution expenses.
Pursuant to the Class A Plan, FDC is paid a distribution fee as a
percentage of Class A's average net assets at an annual rate of up to
0.40%. Pursuant to the Class B Plan, FDC is paid a distribution fee as a
percentage of Class B's average net assets at an annual rate of up to
0.75%. For the purpose of calculating the distribution fees, average net
assets are determined as of the close of business on each day throughout
the month. Currently, the Trustees have approved a distribution fee for
Class A at an annual rate of 0.25%, and a distribution fee for Class B at
an annual rate of 0.65%. These fees may be increased only when, in the
opinion of the Trustees, it is in the best interests of the shareholders of
the applicable class to do so. Class B also pays investment professionals a
service fee at an annual rate of 0.25% of its average daily net assets
determined as of the close of business on each day throughout the month for
personal service and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts.
Under each Plan, if the payment of management fees by the fund to FMR is
deemed to be indirect financing by the fund of the distribution of its
shares, such payment is authorized by the Plans. The Class A Plan and the
Class B Plan specifically recognize that FMR may use its management fee
revenue, as well as its past profits or its other resources, to reimburse
FDC for expenses incurred in connection with the distribution of the
applicable class, including payments made to third parties that assist in
selling shares of the applicable class of the fund or to third parties,
including banks, that render shareholder support services. The
Institutional    Class     Plan specifically recognizes that FMR may use
its resources, including management fees, to pay expenses associated with
the sale of Institutional Class shares. This may include reimbursing FDC
for payments to third parties, such as banks or broker-dealers, that
provide shareholder support services or engage in the sale of Institutional
Class shares. The Trustees have authorized such payments for all classes of
the fund.
Prior to approving each Plan, the Trustees carefully considered all
pertinent factors relating to the implementation of the Plan, and have
determined that there is a reasonable likelihood that the Plan will benefit
the applicable class of the fund and its shareholders. In particular, the
Trustees noted that the Institutional Class Plan does not authorize
payments by the Institutional Class other than those made to FMR under its
management contract with the fund. To the extent that a Plan gives FMR and
FDC greater flexibility in connection with the distribution of shares of
the applicable class of the fund, additional sales of fund shares may
result. Furthermore, certain shareholder support services may be provided
more effectively under the Plans by local entities with whom shareholders
have other relationships.
The Class A and Class B Plans do not provide for specific payments by the
applicable class of any of the expenses of FDC, or obligate FDC or FMR to
perform any specific type or level of distribution activities or incur any
specific level of expense in connection with distribution activities. After
payments by FDC for advertising, marketing and distribution, and payments
to third parties, the amounts remaining, if any, may be used as FDC may
elect.
Each class's Plan was approved by FMR as the then sole shareholder of the
class on    July 1, 1996    . 
The Glass-Steagall Act generally prohibits federally and state chartered or
supervised banks from engaging in the business of underwriting, selling, or
distributing securities. Although the scope of this prohibition under the
Glass-Steagall Act has not been clearly defined by the courts or
appropriate regulatory agencies, FDC believes that the Glass-Steagall Act
should not preclude a bank from performing shareholder support services, or
servicing and recordkeeping functions. FDC intends to engage banks only to
perform such functions. However, changes in federal or state statutes and
regulations pertaining to the permissible activities of banks and their
affiliates or subsidiaries, as well as further judicial or administrative
decisions or interpretations, could prevent a bank from continuing to
perform all or a part of the contemplated services. If a bank were
prohibited from so acting, the Trustees would consider what actions, if
any, would be necessary to continue to provide efficient and effective
shareholder services. In such event, changes in the operation of the fund
might occur, including possible termination of any automatic investment or
redemption or other services then provided by the bank. It is not expected
that shareholders would suffer any adverse financial consequences as a
result of any of these occurrences. In addition, state securities laws on
this issue may differ from the interpretations of federal law expressed
herein, and banks and financial institutions may be required to register as
dealers pursuant to state law. 
The fund may execute portfolio transactions with, and purchase securities
issued by, depository institutions that receive payments under the
Plan   s    . No preference for the instruments of such depository
institutions will be shown in the selection of investments.
DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST
TRUST ORGANIZATION. Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund is a fund of
Fidelity Municipal Trust   ,     an open-end management investment company
originally organized as a Maryland corporation on November 22, 1976   
    and reorganized as a Massachusetts business trust on June 22, 1984, at
which time its name changed to Fidelity Municipal Bond Portfolio. On
February 20, 1996, the fund's name was changed to Fidelity Municipal Bond
Fund, and on June 30, 1996, the fund's name was changed to Fidelity Advisor
Municipal Bond Fund. On March 1, 1986, the trust's name was changed to
Fidelity Municipal Trust. Currently, there are seven funds of the trust:
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund; Fidelity Aggressive Municipal Fund;
Fidelity Insured Municipal Income Fund; Fidelity Ohio Municipal Income
Fund; Fidelity Michigan Municipal Income Fund; Fidelity Minnesota Municipal
Income Fund; and Spartan Pennsylvania Municipal Income Fund. The
Declaration of Trust permits the Trustees to create additional funds.
In the event that FMR ceases to be the investment adviser to the trust or a
fund, the right of the trust or fund to use the identifying names
"Fidelity" and "Spartan" may be withdrawn.
The assets of the trust received for the issue or sale of shares of each
fund and all income, earnings, profits, and proceeds thereof, subject only
to the rights of creditors, are especially allocated to such fund, and
constitute the underlying assets of such fund. The underlying assets of
each fund are segregated on the books of account, and are to be charged
with the liabilities with respect to such fund and with a share of the
general expenses of the trust. Expenses with respect to the trust are to be
allocated in proportion to the asset value of the respective funds, except
where allocations of direct expense can otherwise be fairly made. The
officers of the trust, subject to the general supervision of the Board of
Trustees, have the power to determine which expenses are allocable to a
given fund, or which are general or allocable to all of the funds. In the
event of the dissolution or liquidation of the trust, shareholders of each
fund are entitled to receive as a class the underlying assets of such fund
available for distribution.
SHAREHOLDER AND TRUSTEE LIABILITY. The trust is an entity of the type
commonly known as a "Massachusetts business trust." Under Massachusetts
law, shareholders of such a trust may, under certain circumstances, be held
personally liable for the obligations of the trust. The Declaration of
Trust provides that the trust shall not have any claim against shareholders
except for the payment of the purchase price of shares and requires that
each agreement, obligation, or instrument entered into or executed by the
trust or the Trustees include a provision limiting the obligations created
thereby to the trust and its assets. The Declaration of Trust provides for
indemnification out of each fund's property of any shareholder held
personally liable for the obligations of the fund. The Declaration of Trust
also provides that each fund shall, upon request, assume the defense of any
claim made against any shareholder for any act or obligation of the fund
and satisfy any judgment thereon. Thus, the risk of a shareholder incurring
financial loss on account of shareholder liability is limited to
circumstances in which a fund itself would be unable to meet its
obligations. FMR believes that, in view of the above, the risk of personal
liability to shareholders is remote.
The Declaration of Trust further provides that the Trustees, if they have
exercised reasonable care, will not be liable for any neglect or
wrongdoing, but nothing in the Declaration of Trust protects Trustees
against any liability to which they would otherwise be subject by reason of
willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of
the duties involved in the conduct of their office. Claims asserted against
one class of shares may subject the holders of another class of shares to
certain liabilities.
VOTING RIGHTS. Each fund's capital consists of shares of beneficial
interest. As a shareholder, you receive one vote for each dollar value of
net asset value you own. The shares have no preemptive rights, and Class A
and Institutional Class shares have no conversion rights; the voting and
dividend rights, the conversion rights of Class B shares, the right of
redemption, and the privilege of exchange are described in the Prospectus.
Shares are fully paid and nonassessable, except as set forth under the
heading "Shareholder and Trustee Liability" above. Shareholders
representing 10% or more of the trust, a fund, or a class may, as set forth
in the Declaration of Trust, call meetings of the trust, fund, or class for
any purpose related to the trust, fund, or class, as the case may be,
including, in the case of a meeting of the entire trust, the purpose of
voting on removal of one or more Trustees. The trust or any fund may be
terminated upon the sale of its assets to another open-end management
investment company, or upon liquidation and distribution of its assets, if
approved by vote of the holders of a majority of the trust or the fund, as
determined by the current value of each shareholder's investment in the
fund or trust. If not so terminated, the trust and its funds will continue
indefinitely.
CUSTODIAN. UMB Bank, n.a., 1010 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, is
custodian of the assets of the fund. The custodian is responsible for the
safekeeping of a fund's assets and the appointment of the subcustodian
banks and clearing agencies. The custodian takes no part in determining the
investment policies of a fund or in deciding which securities are purchased
or sold by a fund. However, a fund may invest in obligations of the
custodian and may purchase securities from or sell securities to the
custodian.
FMR, its officers and directors, its affiliated companies, and the Board of
Trustees may, from time to time, conduct transactions with various banks,
including banks serving as custodians for certain funds advised by FMR.
Transactions that have occurred to date include mortgages and personal and
general business loans. In the judgment of FMR, the terms and conditions of
those transactions were not influenced by existing or potential custodial
or other fund relationships.
AUDITOR.    Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P., One Post Office Square, Boston,
MA,     serves as the trust's independent accountant. The auditor examines
financial statements for the fund and provides other audit, tax, and
related services.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The fund's financial statements and financial highlights for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 1995, are included in the fund's Annual Report,
which is a separate report supplied with this SAI. The fund's financial
statements and financial highlights are incorporated herein by reference. 
APPENDIX
DOLLAR-WEIGHTED AVERAGE MATURITY is derived by multiplying the value of
each investment by the time remaining to its maturity, adding these
calculations, and then dividing the total by the value of the fund's
portfolio. An obligation's maturity is typically determined on a stated
final maturity basis, although there are some exceptions to this rule.
For example, if it is probable that the issuer of an instrument will take
advantage of a maturity-shortening device, such as a call, refunding, or
redemption provision, the date on which the instrument will probably be
called, refunded, or redeemed may be considered to be its maturity date.
When a municipal bond issuer has committed to call an issue of bonds and
has established an independent escrow account that is sufficient to, and is
pledged to, refund that issue, the number of days to maturity for the
prerefunded bond is considered to be the number of days to the announced
call date of the bonds.
FIDELITY  MUNICIPAL BOND FUND PROSPECTUS
 
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
FORM N-1A                          
 
ITEM NUMBER   PROSPECTUS SECTION   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>   <C>    <C>                              <C>                                                   
1            ..............................   Cover Page                                            
 
2     a      ..............................   Expenses                                              
 
      b,c    ..............................   *                                                     
 
3     a      ..............................   Financial Highlights                                  
 
      b      ..............................   *                                                     
 
      c      ..............................   Performance                                           
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page                                            
 
4     a      i.............................   Charter                                               
 
             ii...........................    Investment Principles and Risks; The Fund's           
                                              Investment Approach; Securities and Investment        
                                              Practices; Fundamental Investment Policies and        
                                              Restrictions                                          
 
      b      ..............................   Securities and Investment Practices                   
 
      c      ..............................   Who May Want to Invest; Investment Principles         
                                              and Risks; Securities and Investment Practices        
 
5     a      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      b      i.............................   Cover Page; Charter                                   
 
             ii...........................    Charter; Breakdown of Expenses                        
 
             iii..........................    Expenses; Breakdown of Expenses                       
 
      c      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page; Charter; Breakdown of Expenses            
 
      e      ..............................   Charter; Breakdown of Expenses                        
 
      f      ..............................   Expenses                                              
 
      g      ..............................   Expenses; Charter                                     
 
      5A     ..............................   *                                                     
 
6     a      i.............................   Charter                                               
 
             ii...........................    How to Buy Shares; How to Sell Shares; Investor       
                                              Services; Transaction Details; Exchange               
                                              Restrictions; Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers     
 
             iii..........................    *                                                     
 
      b      .............................    Charter                                               
 
      c      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page; Who May Want to Invest                    
 
      e      ..............................   Cover Page; How to Buy Shares; How to Sell            
                                              Shares; Investor Services; Exchange Restrictions;     
                                              Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers; Transaction      
                                              Details                                               
 
      f, g   ..............................   Dividends, Capital Gains, and Taxes                   
 
7     a      ..............................   Cover Page; Charter ; FMR & its Affiliates            
 
      b      ..............................   How to Buy Shares; Transaction Details                
 
      c      ..............................   Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers; How to           
                                              Buy Shares; Transaction Details                       
 
      d      ..............................   How to Buy Shares                                     
 
      e      ..............................   Transaction Details; Breakdown of Expenses            
 
      f      ..............................   Expenses; Breakdown of Expenses                       
 
8            ..............................   How to Sell Shares; Investor Services; Transaction    
                                              Details; Exchange Restrictions                        
 
9            ..............................   *                                                     
 
</TABLE>
 
*Not Applicable
 
 
  
Please read this prospectus before investing, and keep it on file for
future reference. It contains important information, including how the fund
invests and the services available to shareholders.
To learn more about the fund and its investments, you can obtain a copy of
the fund's most recent financial report and portfolio listing or a copy of
the Statement of Additional Information (SAI) dated June 30, 1996. The SAI
has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and is
incorporated herein by reference (legally forms a part of the prospectus).
For a free copy of either document, call Fidelity at 1-800-544-8888.
 
MUTUAL FUND SHARES ARE NOT 
DEPOSITS OR OBLIGATIONS OF, 
OR GUARANTEED BY, ANY 
DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION. 
SHARES ARE NOT INSURED BY 
THE FDIC, FEDERAL RESERVE 
BOARD OR ANY OTHER AGENCY, 
AND ARE SUBJECT TO 
INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING 
POSSIBLE LOSS OF PRINCIPAL 
AMOUNT INVESTED.
 
LIKE ALL MUTUAL FUNDS, 
THESE SECURITIES HAVE NOT 
BEEN APPROVED OR 
DISAPPROVED BY THE 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE 
COMMISSION OR ANY STATE 
SECURITIES COMMISSION, 
NOR HAS THE SECURITIES 
AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
OR ANY STATE SECURITIES 
COMMISSION PASSED UPON 
THE ACCURACY OR 
ADEQUACY OF THIS 
PROSPECTUS. ANY 
REPRESENTATION TO THE 
CONTRARY IS A CRIMINAL 
OFFENSE.
MUN-pro-0696
 
FIDELITY
MUNICIPAL 
BOND
FUND
A Class of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund
Municipal Bond seeks to provide as high a level of interest income exempt
from federal income tax as is consistent with preservation of capital.
PROSPECTUS
JUNE 30, 1996(FIDELITY_LOGO_GRAPHIC) 82 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON, MA 02109
 
 
CONTENTS
 
 
KEY FACTS                  WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST                
 
                           EXPENSES Initial Class's yearly       
                           operating expenses.                   
 
                           FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS A summary        
                           of the fund's financial data.         
 
                           PERFORMANCE How the fund has          
                           done over time.                       
 
THE FUND IN DETAIL         CHARTER How the fund is               
                           organized.                            
 
                           INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS       
                           The fund's overall approach to        
                           investing.                            
 
                           BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES How             
                           operating costs are calculated and    
                           what they include.                    
 
YOUR ACCOUNT               DOING BUSINESS WITH FIDELITY          
 
                           HOW TO BUY ADDITIONAL SHARES          
                           Making additional investments.        
 
                           HOW TO SELL SHARES Taking             
                           money out and closing your            
                           account.                              
 
                           INVESTOR SERVICES Services to         
                           help you manage your account.         
 
SHAREHOLDER AND            DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS,             
ACCOUNT POLICIES           AND TAXES                             
 
                           TRANSACTION DETAILS Share price       
                           calculations and the timing of        
                           purchases and redemptions.            
 
                           EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS                 
 
   KEY FACTS    
 
 
WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST
Fidelity Municipal Bond Fund ("Initial Class") shares are offered through
this prospectus to current Initial Class shareholders.
The fund may be appropriate for investors in higher tax brackets who seek
high current income that is free from federal income tax. The fund is
designed for investors who are interested in investment-grade quality
ratings, but who are willing to forego the highest yields in pursuit of
greater share price stability.
The value of the fund's investments and the income they generate vary from
day to day, and generally reflect changes in interest rates, market
conditions, and other political and economic news.
The fund is not in itself a balanced investment plan. You should consider
your investment objective and tolerance for risk when making an investment
decision. When you sell your fund shares, they may be worth more or less
than what you paid for them.
The fund is composed of multiple classes of shares. Each class of the fund
has a common investment objective and investment portfolio. Class A shares
have a front-end sales charge, or may be subject to a contingent deferred
sales charge (CDSC), and pay a distribution fee. Class B shares do not have
a front-end sales charge, but do have a CDSC, and pay a distribution fee
and a shareholder service fee. Institutional Class shares have no sales
charge, and do not pay a distribution fee or a shareholder service fee, but
are available only to certain types of investors. You may obtain more
information about shares of Institutional Class, Class A, and Class B,
which are not offered through this prospectus, by calling 1-800-843-3001.
EXPENSES
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES are charges you pay when you buy, sell, or
hold Initial Class shares of the fund. 
Maximum sales charge on purchases and   None   
reinvested distributions                       
 
Maximum deferred sales charge   None   
 
Redemption fee   None   
 
Exchange fee   None   
 
Annual account maintenance fee   $12.0   
(for accounts under $2,500)      0       
 
ANNUAL OPERATING EXPENSES are paid out of the fund's assets. The fund pays
a management fee to Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR). It also
incurs other expenses for services such as maintaining shareholder records
and furnishing shareholder statements and financial reports.
Initial Class's expenses are factored into its share price or dividends and
are not charged directly to shareholder accounts (see "Breakdown of
Expenses" on page ).
The following are projections based on historical expenses of the Initial
Class, and are calculated as a percentage of average net assets of the
Initial Class of the fund.
Management fee                 0.40   
                               %      
 
12b-1 fee (Distribution Fee)   None   
 
Other expenses                 0.17   
                               %      
 
Total operating expenses       0.57   
                               %      
 
EXPENSE TABLE EXAMPLE: You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000
investment in Initial Class shares, assuming a 5% annual return and full
redemption at the end of each time period:
1 Year   3 Years   5 Years   10 Years   
 
$6       $18       $32       $71        
 
THESE EXAMPLES ILLUSTRATE THE EFFECT OF EXPENSES, BUT ARE NOT MEANT TO
SUGGEST ACTUAL OR EXPECTED COSTS OR RETURNS, ALL OF WHICH MAY VARY.
   Effective July 1, 1996 FMR has voluntarily agreed to reimburse the
Initial Class to the extent that total operating expenses (excluding
interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, and extraordinary expenses) are in
excess of 0.75% of its average net assets.    
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
The financial highlights table that follows and the fund's financial
statements are included in the fund's Annual Report and have been audited
by    Coopers & Lybrand, L.L.P.     independent accountants. Their report
on the financial statements and financial highlights is included in the
Annual Report. The financial statements, the financial highlights, and the
report are incorporated by reference into the    Initial Class's     SAI   
which may be obtained free of charge by calling 1-800-544-8888    .
   SELECTED PER-SHARE DATA    
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                 <C>        <C>         <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>         <C>    
    17.Years ended 
December             1995       1994        1993       1992       1991       1990       1989       1988       1987        1986      
 31                                         A 
 
 18.Net asset value, $ 7.37     $ 8.69      $ 8.5      $ 8.4      $ 8.1      $ 8.1      $ 7.9      $ 7.6      $ 8.28      $ 7.4     
 beginning of period 0          0           00         70         30         30         50         00         0           20        
 
 19.Income from       .408       .455        .487       .519       .526       .541       .556       .558       .548        .553     
 Investment Operations                                    
  Net interest income                                         
 
 20. Net realized and .904       (1.18       .600       .210       .410       --         .180       .350       (.680       .860     
 unrealized                      0)                                                                            )                    
  gain (loss)                                                
 
 21. Total from       1.312      (.725       1.08       .729       .936       .541       .736       .908       (.132       1.41     
 investment operations           )           7                                                                 )           3       
 
 22.Less Distributions(.408      (.455       (.487      (.519      (.526      (.541      (.556      (.558      (.548       (.553    
  From net interest   )          )           )          )          )          )          )          )          )           )        
 income                                                      
 
 23. From net realized  --       (.010       (.410      (.180      (.070      --         --         --         --          --       
 gain                            )           )          )          )                                                      
 
 24. In excess of net (.004      (.130       --         --         --         --         --         --         --          --       
 realized gain        )          )                                                                                               
 
 25. Total 
distributions         (.412      (.595       (.897      (.699      (.596      (.541      (.556      (.558      (.548       (.553    
                      )          )           )          )          )          )          )          )          )           )        
 
 26.Net asset value, 
end                  $ 8.27     $ 7.37      $ 8.6      $ 8.5      $ 8.4      $ 8.1      $ 8.1      $ 7.9      $ 7.60      $ 8.2     
 of period           0          0           90         00         70         30         30         50         0           80        
 
 27.Total return      18.15      (8.49)      13.1       8.93       11.91      6.91       9.56       12.3       (1.56)      19.5     
                      %          %           7%         %          %          %          %          0%         %           4%      
 
 28.RATIOS AND SUPPLEMENTAL  
 DATA                                                        
 
 29.Net assets, end 
of                   $ 1,08     $ 1,00      $ 1,2      $ 1,1      $ 1,1      $ 1,0      $ 1,0      $ 984      $ 903       $ 1,1     
 period (In millions)2          5           62         92         63         70         54                                41        
 
 30.Ratio of expenses 
to                    .57%       .53%        .49%       .49%       .50%       .50%       .50%       .51%       .57%        .51%     
 average net assets                                                                                                              
 
 31.Ratio of net 
interest              5.14       5.68        5.51       6.11       6.35       6.71       6.90       7.11       7.03        6.90     
 income to            %          %           %          %          %          %          %          %          %           %        
 average net assets                                          
 
 32.Portfolio turnover 
rate                  72%        95%         74%        53%        33%        49%        64%        46%        72%         72%      
    
 
</TABLE>
 
   A EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1993, THE FUND ADOPTED STATEMENT OF POSITION
93-2, "DETERMINATION, DISCLOSURE, AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT PRESENTATION OF
INCOME, CAPITAL GAIN, AND RETURN OF CAPITAL DISTRIBUTIONS BY INVESTMENT
COMPANIES." AS A RESULT, NET INTEREST INCOME PER SHARE MAY REFLECT CERTAIN
RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO TAX DIFFERENCES.    
PERFORMANCE
Bond fund performance can be measured as TOTAL RETURN or YIELD. The total
returns that follow are based on historical fund results.
The fund's fiscal year runs from January 1 through December 31. The tables
   below     show Initial Class's performance over past fiscal years. The
chart    on the following page     presents calendar year performance.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS
Fiscal years    Past    Past    Past    
ended           1       5       10      
December 31,    year    years   years   
1995                                    
 
Municipal        18.15    8.33    8.73   
Bond Fund -     %        %       %       
Initial Class                            
 
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS
Fiscal years    Past    Past    Past    
ended           1       5       10      
December 31,    year    years   years   
1995                                    
 
Municipal        18.15    49.17     130.9   
Bond Fund -     %        %        0%        
Initial Class                               
 
EXPLANATION OF TERMS
TOTAL RETURN is the change in value of an investment in the fund over a
given period, assuming reinvestment of any dividends and capital gains. A
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN reflects actual performance over a stated period of
time. An AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN is a hypothetical rate of return that,
if achieved annually, would have produced the same cumulative total return
if performance had been constant over the entire period. Average annual
total returns smooth out variations in performance; they are not the same
as actual year-by-year results.
YIELD refers to the income generated by an investment in the fund over a
given period of time, expressed as an annual percentage rate. Yields are
calculated according to a standard that is required for all stock and bond
funds. Because this differs from other accounting methods, the quoted yield
may not equal the income actually paid to shareholders.
A TAX-EQUIVALENT YIELD shows what an investor would have to earn before
taxes to equal a tax-free yield.
THE COMPETITIVE FUNDS AVERAGE is the Lipper General Municipal Debt Funds
Average, which currently reflects the performance of over    225     mutual
funds with similar objectives. This average, which assumes reinvestment of
distributions, is published by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.
THE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX is a widely recognized measure of inflation
calculated by the U.S. Government.
The fund's recent strategies, performance, and holdings are detailed twice
a year in financial reports, which are sent to all shareholders.    For
current performance or a free annual report, please call
1-800-544-8888.    
TOTAL RETURNS AND YIELDS ARE BASED ON PAST RESULTS AND ARE NOT AN
INDICATION OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
YEAR-BY-YEAR TOTAL RETURNS
Calendar years    1995 1994 1993 1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986    
Municipal Bond Fund - Initial Class    18.15    %    -8.49% 13.17% 8.93%
11.91% 6.91% 9.56% 
12.30% -1.56% 19.54%    
Lipper Gen. Muni. Debt Funds Avg    16.84    %    -6.50% 12.47% 8.79%
12.09% 6.05% 9.65
% 11.53% -0.94%. 18.74%    
Consumer Price Index    2.54    %    2.67% 2.75% 2.90% 3.06% 6.11% 4.65%
4.42% 4.43% 1.10
%    
Percentage (%)
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 18.15
Row: 2, Col: 1, Value: -8.49
Row: 3, Col: 1, Value: 13.17
Row: 4, Col: 1, Value: 8.93
Row: 5, Col: 1, Value: 11.91
Row: 6, Col: 1, Value: 6.91
Row: 7, Col: 1, Value: 9.56
Row: 8, Col: 1, Value: 12.3
Row: 9, Col: 1, Value: -1.56
Row: 10, Col: 1, Value: 19.54
(LARGE SOLID BOX) Municipal 
Bond Fund - 
Initial Class
THE FUND IN DETAIL
 
 
CHARTER
MUNICIPAL BOND IS A MUTUAL FUND: an investment that pools shareholders'
money and invests it toward a specified goal. The fund is a diversified
fund of Fidelity Municipal Trust, an open-end management investment company
organized as a Massachusetts business trust on June 22, 1984.
THE FUND IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF TRUSTEES which is responsible for
protecting the interests of shareholders. The trustees are experienced
executives who meet throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities,
review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the
fund, and review the fund's performance. The majority of trustees are not
otherwise affiliated with Fidelity.
THE FUND MAY HOLD SPECIAL MEETINGS AND MAIL PROXY MATERIALS. These meetings
may be called to elect or remove trustees, change fundamental policies,
approve a management contract, or for other purposes. Shareholders not
attending these meetings are encouraged to vote by proxy.    The transfer
agent     will mail proxy materials in advance, including a voting card and
information about the proposals to be voted on. The number of votes you are
entitled to is based upon the dollar value of your investment.
Separate votes are taken by each class of shares, fund, or trust, if a
matter affects just that class of shares, fund, or trust, respectively.
FMR AND ITS AFFILIATES
Fidelity Investments is one of the largest investment management
organizations in the United States and has its principal business address
at 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109. It includes a number
of different subsidiaries and divisions which provide a variety of
financial services and products. The fund employs various Fidelity
companies to perform activities required for its operation.
The fund is managed by FMR, which chooses the fund's investments and
handles its business affairs.
As of    April 30    , 1   996    , FMR advised funds having approximately
   26     million shareholder accounts with a total value of more than
$   386     billion.
George Fischer is manager of Municipal Bond, which he has managed since
October 1995. He also manages Spartan Bond Strategist, Insured Municipal
Income, and various trust accounts. Mr. Fischer joined Fidelity in 1989.
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions.
Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) distributes and markets Fidelity's
funds and services. Fidelity Service Co. (FSC) performs transfer agent
servicing functions for the Initial Class shares of the fund.
FMR Corp. is the ultimate parent company of FMR. Members of the Edward C.
Johnson 3d family are the predominant owners of a class of shares of common
stock representing approximately 49% of the voting power of FMR Corp. Under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act), control of a company is
presumed where one individual or group of individuals owns more than 25% of
the voting stock of that company; therefore, the Johnson family may be
deemed under the 1940 Act to form a controlling group with respect to FMR
Corp.
UMB Bank, n.a. (UMB) is the fund's transfer agent, although it employs FSC
to perform these functions for the Initial Class of the fund. UMB is
located at 1010 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64106.
To carry out the fund's transactions, FMR may use its broker-dealer
affiliates and other firms that sell fund shares, provided that the fund
receives services and commission rates comparable to those of other
broker-dealers.
INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS
THE FUND'S INVESTMENT APPROACH
The fund seeks as high a level of federally tax-free income as is
consistent with preservation of capital by investing primarily in
investment   -    grade municipal bonds. The fund normally invests at least
80% of its assets in municipal securities whose interest is free from
federal income tax. The fund may, under normal conditions, invest up to
100% of its assets in municipal securities subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax.
   Although the fund can invest in securities of any maturity, FMR seeks to
manage the fund so that it generally reacts to changes in interest rates
similarly to municipal bonds with maturities between 8 and 18 years. As of
the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, the fund's dollar-weighted average
maturity was approximately 13 years.     
The total return from a bond is a combination of income and price gains or
losses. While income is the most important component of bond returns over
time, the fund's emphasis on income does not mean that the fund invests
only in the highest-yielding bonds available, or that it can avoid risks to
principal. In selecting investments for the fund, FMR considers a bond's
income potential together with its potential for price gains or losses. FMR
focuses on assembling a portfolio of income-producing securities that it
believes will provide the best tradeoff between risk and return within the
range of securities that are eligible investments for the fund.
The fund's yield and share price change daily and are based on changes in
interest rates, market conditions, other economic and political news, and
on the quality and maturity of its investments. In general, bond prices
rise when interest rates fall, and vice versa. This effect is usually more
pronounced for longer-term securities. FMR may use various investment
techniques to hedge a portion of the fund's risk, but there is no guarantee
that these strategies will work as intended. When you sell your shares,
they may be worth more or less than what you paid for them.
If you are subject to the federal alternative minimum tax, you should note
that the fund may invest all of its assets in municipal securities issued
to finance private activities. The interest from these investments is a
tax-preference item for purposes of the tax.
FMR normally invests the fund's assets according to its investment strategy
and does not expect to invest in federally taxable obligations. The fund
also reserves the right to invest without limitation in short-term
instruments, to hold a substantial amount of uninvested cash, or to invest
more than normally permitted in federally taxable obligations for
temporary, defensive purposes.
SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT PRACTICES
The following pages contain more detailed information about types of
instruments in which the fund may invest, strategies FMR may employ in
pursuit of the fund's investment objective, and a summary of related risks.
Any restrictions listed supplement those discussed earlier in this section.
A complete listing of the fund's limitations and more detailed information
about the fund's investments are contained in the fund's SAI. Policies and
limitations are considered at the time of purchase; the sale of instruments
is not required in the event of a subsequent change in circumstances.
FMR may not buy all of these instruments or use all of these techniques
unless it believes that they are consistent with the fund's investment
objective and policies and that doing so will help the fund achieve its
goal.    Fund     holdings and recent investment strategies are    detailed
    in the fund's financial reports, which are sent to shareholders twice a
year. For a free SAI or financial report, call 1-800-544-8888.
DEBT SECURITIES. Bonds and other debt instruments are used by issuers to
borrow money from investors. The issuer pays the investor a fixed or
variable rate of interest, and must repay the amount borrowed at maturity.
Some debt securities, such as zero coupon bonds, do not pay current
interest, but are purchased at a discount from their face values. In
general, bond prices rise when interest rates fall, and vice versa. Debt
securities have varying degrees of quality and varying levels of
sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Longer-term bonds are generally
more sensitive to interest rate changes than short-term bonds.
Investment-grade debt securities are medium- and high-quality securities.
Some, however, may possess speculative characteristics and may be more
sensitive to economic changes and to changes in the financial condition of
issuers.
RESTRICTIONS:    The fund invests only in investment-grade securities. A
security is considered to be investment-grade if it is judged by FMR to be
of equivalent quality to securities rated Baa or BBB or higher by Moody's
Investor Service (Moody's) or Standard & Poor's (S&P), respectively.
However, the fund will limit its investments in medium quality securities,
as judged by FMR, to one-third of its total assets; will not purchase
securities rated below Baa or BBB by Moody's or S&P, respectively; and will
not invest more than 20% of its total assets in securities not rated by
Moody's and S&P.    
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES are issued to raise money for a variety of public
purposes, including general financing for state and local governments, or
financing for specific projects or public facilities. They may be issued in
anticipation of future revenues, and may be backed by the full taxing power
of a municipality, the revenues from a specific project, or the credit of a
private organization. The value of some or all municipal securities may be
affected by uncertainties in the municipal market related to legislation or
litigation involving the taxation of municipal securities or the rights of
municipal securities holders. The fund may own a municipal security
directly or through a participation interest.
CREDIT SUPPORT. Issuers may employ various forms of credit enhancement,
including letters of credit, guarantees, or insurance from a bank,
insurance company, or other entity. These arrangements expose the fund to
the credit risk of the entity. In the case of foreign entities, extensive
public information about the entity may not be available and the entity may
be subject to unfavorable political, economic, or governmental developments
which might affect its ability to honor its commitment.
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES include interests in pools of purchase contracts,
financing leases, or sales agreements entered into by municipalities. These
securities usually rely on continued payments by a municipality, and may
also be subject to prepayment risk.
VARIABLE AND FLOATING RATE SECURITIES have interest rates that are
periodically adjusted either at specific intervals or whenever a benchmark
rate changes. Inverse floaters have interest rates that move in the
opposite direction from a benchmark, making the security's market value
more volatile.
MUNICIPAL LEASE OBLIGATIONS are used by municipalities to acquire land,
equipment, or facilities. If the municipality stops making payments or
transfers its obligations to a private entity, the obligation could lose
value or become taxable.
OTHER MUNICIPAL SECURITIES may include obligations of U.S. territories and
possessions such as Guam, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico, and their
political subdivisions and public corporations.
PUT FEATURES entitle the holder to put (sell back) an instrument to the
issuer or a financial intermediary. In exchange for this benefit, the fund
may pay periodic fees or accept a lower interest rate. Demand features and
standby commitments are types of put features.
PRIVATE ENTITIES may be involved in some municipal securities. For example,
industrial revenue bonds are backed by private entities, and resource
recovery bonds often involve private corporations. The viability of a
project or tax incentives could affect the value and credit quality of
these securities.
ADJUSTING INVESTMENT EXPOSURE. The fund can use various techniques to
increase or decrease its exposure to changing security prices, interest
rates,    commodity prices,     or other factors that affect security
values. These techniques may involve derivative transactions such as buying
and selling options and futures contracts, and purchasing indexed
securities.
FMR can use these practices to adjust the risk and return characteristics
of the fund's portfolio of investments. If FMR judges market conditions
incorrectly or employs a strategy that does not correlate well with the
fund's investments, these techniques could result in a loss, regardless of
whether the intent was to reduce risk or increase return. These techniques
may increase the volatility of the fund and may involve a small investment
of cash relative to the magnitude of the risk assumed. In addition, these
techniques could result in a loss if the counterparty to the transaction
does not perform as promised.
ILLIQUID AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES. Some investments may be determined by
FMR, under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, to be illiquid, which
means that they may be difficult to sell promptly at an acceptable price.
The sale of some illiquid securities, and some other securities, may be
subject to legal restrictions. Difficulty in selling securities may result
in a loss or may be costly to the fund.
RESTRICTIONS: The fund may not purchase a security if, as a result, more
than 10% of its assets would be invested in illiquid securities. 
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED-DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS are trading practices in
which payment and delivery for the securities take place at a future date.
The market value of a security could change during this period.
DIVERSIFICATION. Diversifying a fund's investment portfolio can reduce the
risks of investing. This may include limiting the amount of money invested
in any one issuer or, on a broader scale, in any one industry or type of
project. Economic, business, or political changes can affect all securities
of a similar type.
RESTRICTIONS: With respect to 75% of its total assets, the fund may not
purchase a security if, as a result, more than 5% would be invested in the
securities of any one issuer. This limitation does not apply to U.S.
Government securities. The fund may invest more than 25% of its total
assets in tax-free securities that finance similar types of projects.
BORROWING. The fund may borrow from banks or from other funds advised by
FMR, or through reverse repurchase agreements. If the fund borrows money,
its share price may be subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing
is paid off. If the fund makes additional investments while borrowings are
outstanding, this may be considered a form of leverage.
RESTRICTIONS: The fund may borrow only for temporary or emergency purposes,
but not in an amount exceeding 331/3% of its total assets.
FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS
Some of the policies and restrictions discussed on the preceding pages are
fundamental, that is, subject to change only by shareholder approval. The
following paragraph   s     restate all those that are fundamental. All
policies stated throughout this prospectus, other than those identified in
the following paragraph   s    , can be changed without shareholder
approval. 
The fund seeks to provide as high a level of interest income exempt from
federal income tax as is consistent with preservation of capital.
The fund invests in a diversified portfolio of municipal bonds. The fund
will invest primarily in municipal bonds judged by FMR to be of high   
    grade or upper        medium        grade quality, although it may
invest up to one-third of its total assets in bonds judged to be of
medium        grade quality if they are suitable for achieving its
investment objective. The fund's standards for high        grade, upper   
    medium        grade, and medium        grade obligations are
essentially the same as Moody's and S&P's four highest categories of Baa or
BBB and above. The fund will not invest in any bond rated lower than Baa by
Moody's or BBB by S&P, but may invest up to 20% of its total assets in
bonds not rated by either of these rating services if FMR judges them to
meet the fund's quality standards. The fund will normally invest at least
80% of its assets in municipal securities whose interest is exempt from
federal income tax.
With respect to 75% of its total assets, the fund may not purchase a
security if, as a result, more than 5% would be invested in the securities
of any one issuer.
The fund may borrow only for temporary or emergency purposes, but not in an
amount exceeding 331/3% of its total assets.
BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES
Like all mutual funds, the fund pays fees related to its daily operations.
Expenses paid out of    the     Initial Class's assets are reflected in its
share price or dividends; they are neither billed directly to shareholders
nor deducted from shareholder accounts.
The fund pays a MANAGEMENT FEE to FMR for managing its investments and
business affairs. The fund also pays OTHER EXPENSES   ,     which are
explained    on the following page    .
FMR may, from time to time, agree to reimburse the fund for management fees
and other expenses above a specified limit. FMR retains the ability to be
repaid by the fund if expenses fall below the specified limit prior to the
end of the fiscal year. Reimbursement arrangements, which may be terminated
at any time without notice, can decrease the fund's expenses and boost its
performance.
MANAGEMENT FEE
The management fee is calculated and paid to FMR every month. The fee is
calculated by adding a group fee rate to an individual fund fee rate, and
multiplying the result by the fund's average net assets.
The group fee rate is based on the average net assets of all the mutual
funds advised by FMR. This rate cannot rise above 0.37%, and it drops as
total assets under management increase.
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, the group fee rate was
0.1482%. The individual fund fee rate is 0.25%. The total management fee
rate for the fiscal year ended 1995 was 0.40%.
OTHER EXPENSES
While the management fee is a significant component of the fund's annual
operating costs, the fund has other expenses as well.
UMB has entered into a sub-arrangement with FSC. FSC performs transfer
agency, dividend disbursing and shareholder services for the Initial Class
shares of the fund. FSC also calculates the NAV and dividends for the
Initial Class shares of the fund, and maintains the fund's general
accounting records. All of the fees are paid to FSC by UMB, which is
reimbursed by the Initial Class or the fund, as appropriate, for such
payments.
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, UMB paid FSC    on behalf of
the Initial Class     fees equal to 0.   12    % of the Initial Class's
average net assets for transfer agency and related services, and UMB paid
FSC fees equal to 0.   03    % of the fund's average net assets for pricing
and bookkeeping services.
The Initial Class has adopted a DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN. This plan
recognizes that FMR may use its resources, including management fees, to
pay expenses associated with the sale of Initial Class shares. This may
include reimbursing FDC for payments to third parties, such as banks or
broker-dealers, that provide shareholder support services or engage in the
sale of Initial Class shares. The Board of Trustees of the fund has not
authorized such payments. 
The fund also pays other expenses, such as legal, audit, and custodian
fees; in some instances, proxy solicitation costs; and the compensation of
trustees who are not affiliated with Fidelity.
The fund's portfolio turnover rate for the fiscal year ended 1995 was 72%.
This rate varies from year to year.
   YOUR ACCOUNT    
 
 
DOING BUSINESS WITH FIDELITY
Fidelity Investments was established in 1946 to manage one of America's
first mutual funds. Today, Fidelity is the largest mutual fund company in
the country, and is known as an innovative provider of high-quality
financial services to individuals and institutions.
In addition to its mutual fund business, the company operates one of
America's leading discount brokerage firms, Fidelity Brokerage Services,
Inc. (FBSI). Fidelity is also a leader in providing tax-sheltered
retirement plans for individuals investing on their own or through their
employer.
Fidelity is committed to providing investors with practical information to
make investment decisions. Based in Boston, Fidelity provides customers
with complete service 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, through a network of
telephone service centers around the country. 
To reach Fidelity for general information, call these numbers:
(small solid bullet) For mutual funds, 1-800-544-8888
(small solid bullet) For brokerage, 1-800-544-7272
If you would prefer to speak with a representative in person, Fidelity has
over 80 walk-in Investor Centers across the country.
HOW TO BUY ADDITIONAL SHARES
INITIAL CLASS'S share price, called net asset value (NAV), is calculated
every business day. Initial Class's shares are sold without a sales charge.
Shares are purchased at the next share price calculated after your
investment is received and accepted    by the transfer agent    . Share
price is normally calculated at 4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
If you buy additional shares by check or Fidelity Money Line(registered
trademark), and then sell those shares by any method other than by exchange
to another Fidelity fund, the payment may be delayed for up to seven
business days to ensure that your previous investment has cleared.
MINIMUM INVESTMENTS 
TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT  $250
Through    regular     investment plans $100
MINIMUM BALANCE $1,000
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                   <C>   <C>                                                
                                            TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT                               
 
Phone 1-800-544-777 (phone_graphic)         (small solid bullet) Exchange from another         
                                            Fidelity fund account with                         
                                            the same registration,                             
                                            including name, address,                           
                                            and taxpayer ID number.                            
                                            (small solid bullet) Use Fidelity Money Line to    
                                            transfer from your bank                            
                                            account. Call before your                          
                                            first use to verify that this                      
                                            service is in place on your                        
                                            account. Maximum Money                             
                                            Line: $50,000.                                     
 
</TABLE>
 
Mail (mail_graphic)         (small solid bullet) Make your check payable to    
                            "Fidelity Municipal Bond Fund                      
                               - Initial Class    ." Indicate your             
                            fund account number on your                        
                            check and mail to the address                      
                            printed on your account                            
                            statement.                                         
                            (small solid bullet) Exchange by mail: call        
                            1-800-544-6666 for                                 
                            instructions.                                      
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                        <C>   <C>                                                    
In Person (hand_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Bring your check to a Fidelity    
                           Investor Center. Call                                  
                           1-800-544-9797 for the                                 
                           center nearest you.                                    
 
</TABLE>
 
Wire (wire_graphic)         (small solid bullet) Wire to:        
                            Bankers Trust Company,               
                            Bank Routing #021001033,             
                            Account #00163053.                   
                                                                 
                            Specify "Fidelity Municipal          
                            Bond Fund    -     Initial Class"    
                            and include your account             
                            number and your name.                
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                        <C>   <C>                                            
Automatically 
(automatic_graphic)        (small solid bullet) Use Fidelity Automatic    
                           Account Builder. Call                          
                           1-800-544-6666 to change                       
                           the amount of your                             
                           investment, skip an                            
                           investment, or stop                            
                           Automatic Account Builder.                     
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                             <C>   <C>   
(tdd_graphic) TDD - Service for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired: 1-800-544-0118               
 
</TABLE>
 
HOW TO SELL SHARES 
You can arrange to take money out of your fund account at any time by
selling (redeeming) some or all of your shares. Your shares will be sold at
the next share price calculated after your order is received and accepted.
Share price is normally calculated at 4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
TO SELL SHARES IN AN ACCOUNT, you may use any of the methods described on
these two pages.
IF YOU ARE SELLING SOME BUT NOT ALL OF YOUR    ACCOUNT     SHARES, leave at
least $1,000 worth of shares in the account to keep it open. 
TO SELL SHARES BY BANK WIRE OR FIDELITY MONEY LINE, you will need to sign
up for these services in advance. 
CERTAIN REQUESTS MUST INCLUDE A SIGNATURE GUARANTEE. It is designed to
protect you and Fidelity from fraud. Your request must be made in writing
and include a signature guarantee if any of the following situations apply: 
(small solid bullet) You wish to redeem more than $100,000 worth of shares, 
(small solid bullet) Your account registration has changed within the last
30 days,
(small solid bullet) The check is being mailed to a different address than
the one on your account (record address), 
(small solid bullet) The check is being made payable to someone other than
the account owner, or
(small solid bullet) The redemption proceeds are being transferred to a
Fidelity account with a different registration. 
You should be able to obtain a signature guarantee from a bank, broker
(including Fidelity Investor Centers), dealer, credit union (if authorized
under state law), securities exchange or association, clearing agency, or
savings association. A notary public cannot provide a signature guarantee. 
SELLING SHARES IN WRITING 
Write a "letter of instruction" with: 
(small solid bullet) Your name, 
(small solid bullet) The fund's name, 
(small solid bullet) The applicable class name    ("Initial Class")    ,
(small solid bullet) Your fund account number, 
(small solid bullet) The dollar amount or number of shares to be redeemed,
and 
(small solid bullet) Any other applicable requirements listed in the
   following     table. 
Deliver your letter to a Fidelity Investor Center, or mail it to:
Fidelity Investments
P.O. Box 660602
Dallas, TX 75266-0602
Unless otherwise instructed, Fidelity will send a check to the record
address.
CHECKWRITING 
If you have a checkbook for your account, you may write an unlimited number
of checks.    The minimum amount for a check is $500.     Do not, however,
try to close out your account by check.
      ACCOUNT TYPE   SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                              <C>                   <C>                                                    
Phone 1-800-544-777 (phone_graphic)              All account types     (small solid bullet) Maximum check request:            
                                                                       $100,000.                                              
                                                                       (small solid bullet) For Money Line transfers to       
                                                                       your bank account; minimum:                            
                                                                       $10; maximum: $100,000.                                
                                                                       (small solid bullet) You may exchange to other         
                                                                       Fidelity funds if both                                 
                                                                       accounts are registered with                           
                                                                       the same name(s), address,                             
                                                                       and taxpayer ID number.                                
 
Mail or in Person (mail_graphic)(hand_graphic)   Individual, Joint     (small solid bullet) The letter of instruction must    
                                                 Tenant,               be signed by all persons                               
                                                 Sole Proprietorship   required to sign for                                   
                                                 , UGMA, UTMA          transactions, exactly as their                         
                                                 Trust                 names appear on the                                    
                                                                       account.                                               
                                                                       (small solid bullet) The trustee must sign the         
                                                                       letter indicating capacity as                          
                                                 Business or           trustee. If the trustee's name                         
                                                 Organization          is not in the account                                  
                                                                       registration, provide a copy of                        
                                                                       the trust document certified                           
                                                                       within the last 60 days.                               
                                                                       (small solid bullet) At least one person               
                                                 Executor,             authorized by corporate                                
                                                 Administrator,        resolution to act on the                               
                                                 Conservator,          account must sign the letter.                          
                                                 Guardian              (small solid bullet) Include a corporate               
                                                                       resolution with corporate seal                         
                                                                       or a signature guarantee.                              
                                                                       (small solid bullet) Call 1-800-544-6666 for           
                                                                       instructions.                                          
 
Wire (wire_graphic)                              All account types     (small solid bullet) You must sign up for the wire     
                                                                       feature before using it. To                            
                                                                       verify that it is in place, call                       
                                                                       1-800-544-6666. Minimum                                
                                                                       wire: $5,000.                                          
                                                                       (small solid bullet) Your wire redemption request      
                                                                       must be received by Fidelity                           
                                                                       before 4:00 p.m. Eastern                               
                                                                       time for money to be wired                             
                                                                       on the next business day.                              
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                     <C>                 <C>                                                  
Check (check_graphic)   All account types   (small solid bullet) Minimum check: $500.            
                                            (small solid bullet) All account owners must sign    
                                            a signature card to receive a                        
                                            checkbook.                                           
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                             <C>   <C>   
(tdd_graphic) TDD - Service for the Deaf and Hearing Impaired: 1-800-544-0118               
 
</TABLE>
 
INVESTOR SERVICES
Fidelity provides a variety of services to help you manage your account.
INFORMATION SERVICES
FIDELITY'S TELEPHONE REPRESENTATIVES are available 24 hours a day, 365 days
a year. Whenever you call, you can speak with someone equipped to provide
the information or service you need.
STATEMENTS AND REPORTS that Fidelity sends to you include the following:
(small solid bullet) Confirmation statements (after every transaction,
except a reinvestment, that affects your account balance or your account
registration)
(small solid bullet) Account statements    (quarterly)    
(small solid bullet) Financial reports (every six months)
To reduce expenses, only one copy of most financial reports and
prospectuses will be mailed to your household, even if you have more than
one account in the fund. Call 1-800-544-6666 if you need copies of
financial reports    or     prospectuses.
TRANSACTION SERVICES 
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE. You may sell your Initial Class shares and buy shares
of other Fidelity funds by telephone or in writing.
Note that exchanges out of the fund are limited to four per calendar year,
and that they may have tax consequences for you. For details on policies
and restrictions governing exchanges, including circumstances under which a
shareholder's exchange privilege may be suspended or revoked, see "Exchange
Restrictions," page .
SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PLANS let you set up periodic redemptions from your
account.
FIDELITY MONEY LINE(registered trademark) enables you to transfer money by
phone between your bank account and your fund account. Most transfers are
complete within three business days of your call.   
24-HOUR SERVICE
ACCOUNT ASSISTANCE
1-800-544-6666
ACCOUNT BALANCES
1-800-544-7544
ACCOUNT TRANSACTIONS
1-800-544-7777
PRODUCT INFORMATION
1-800-544-8888
QUOTES
1-800-544-8544
RETIREMENT ACCOUNT 
ASSISTANCE
1-800-544-4774
 AUTOMATED SERVICE    
(checkmark)
REGULAR INVESTMENT PLANS
One easy way to pursue your financial goals is to invest money regularly.
Fidelity offers convenient services that let you transfer money into your
fund account, or between fund accounts, automatically. While regular
investment plans do not guarantee a profit and will not protect you against
loss in a declining market, they can be an excellent way to invest for a
home, educational expenses, and other long-term financial goals.
REGULAR INVESTMENT PLANS               
 
FIDELITY AUTOMATIC ACCOUNT BUILDERSM                                  
TO MOVE MONEY FROM YOUR BANK ACCOUNT TO A FIDELITY FUND               
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>       <C>           <C>                                                            
MINIMUM   FREQUENCY     SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                         
$100      Monthly or    (small solid bullet) Call 1-800-544-6666 for an application.   
          quarterly     (small solid bullet) To change the amount or frequency of      
                        your investment, call 1-800-544-6666 at                        
                        least three business days prior to your                        
                        next scheduled investment date.                                
 
</TABLE>
 
 
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<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                                 <C>   <C>   
DIRECT DEPOSIT                                                                                  
TO SEND ALL OR A PORTION OF YOUR PAYCHECK OR GOVERNMENT CHECK TO A FIDELITY FUNDA               
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>       <C>          <C>                                                              
MINIMUM   FREQUENCY    SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                           
$100      Every pay    (small solid bullet) Call 1-800-544-6666 for an authorization    
          period       form.                                                            
                       (small solid bullet) Changes require a new authorization         
                       form.                                                            
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                        <C>   <C>   
FIDELITY AUTOMATIC EXCHANGE SERVICE                                                    
TO MOVE MONEY FROM A FIDELITY MONEY MARKET FUND TO ANOTHER FIDELITY FUND               
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>       <C>              <C>                                                             
MINIMUM   FREQUENCY        SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                          
$100      Monthly,         (small solid bullet) To establish, call 1-800-544-6666 after    
          bimonthly,       both accounts are opened.                                       
          quarterly, or    (small solid bullet) To change the amount or frequency of       
          annually         your investment, call 1-800-544-6666.                           
 
</TABLE>
 
A BECAUSE ITS SHARE PRICE FLUCTUATES, THE FUND MAY NOT BE AN APPROPRIATE
CHOICE FOR DIRECT DEPOSIT OF YOUR ENTIRE CHECK.
SHAREHOLDER AND ACCOUNT POLICIES
 
 
DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS, AND TAXES
The fund distributes substantially all of its net investment income and
capital gains to shareholders each year. Income dividends are declared
daily and paid monthly. Capital gains   , if any,     are normally
distributed in February and December.
DISTRIBUTION OPTIONS
Initial Class offers four options:
1. REINVESTMENT OPTION. Your dividend and capital gain distributions will
be automatically reinvested in additional    Initial Class     shares. If
you did not indicate a choice on your application, you were automatically
assigned this option.
2. INCOME-EARNED OPTION. Your capital gain distributions will be
automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same class of the
fund, but you will be sent a check for each dividend distribution.
3. CASH OPTION. You will be sent a check for your dividend and capital gain
distributions.
4. DIRECTED DIVIDENDS(registered trademark) PROGRAM. Your dividend and
capital gain distributions will be automatically invested in shares of
another identically registered Fidelity fund.
Dividends will be reinvested at the Initial Class's NAV on the last day of
the month. Capital gain distributions will be reinvested at the NAV as of
the date the class deducts the distribution from its NAV. The mailing of
distribution checks will begin within seven days, or longer for a December
ex-dividend date.
TAXES
As with any investment, you should consider how an investment in a tax-free
fund could affect you. Below are some of the fund's tax implications.
TAXES ON DISTRIBUTIONS. Interest income that the fund earns is distributed
to shareholders as income dividends. Interest that is federally tax-free
remains tax-free when it is distributed. 
However, gain on the sale of tax-free bonds results in taxable
distributions. Short-term capital gains and a portion of the gain on bonds
purchased at a discount are taxed as dividends. Long-term capital gain
distributions are taxed as long-term capital gains. These distributions are
taxable when they are paid, whether you take them in cash or reinvest them.
However, distributions declared in December and paid in January are taxable
as if they were paid on December 31.
   Every January, the transfer agent     will send you and the IRS a
statement showing the tax status of the distributions paid to you in the
previous year.
The interest from some municipal securities is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax. The fund may invest up to 100% of its assets in
these securities. Individuals who are subject to the tax must report this
interest on their tax returns.
A portion of the fund's dividends may be free from state or local taxes.
Income from investments in your state are often tax-free to you. Each year,
   the transfer agent     will send you a breakdown of your fund's income
from each state to help you calculate your taxes.
During the fiscal year ended 1995, 100% of the fund's income dividends was
free from federal income tax, and 0% of the fund's income dividends was
subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
TAXES ON TRANSACTIONS. Your redemptions-including exchanges-are subject to
capital gains tax. A capital gain or loss is the difference between the
cost of your shares and the price you receive when you sell them. 
Whenever you sell shares of the fund, Fidelity will send you a confirmation
statement showing how many shares you sold and at what price. 
You will also receive a consolidated transaction statement every January.
However, it is up to you or your tax preparer to determine whether this
sale resulted in a capital gain and, if so, the amount of tax to be paid.
BE SURE TO KEEP YOUR REGULAR ACCOUNT STATEMENTS; the information they
contain will be essential in calculating the amount of your capital gains.
"BUYING A DIVIDEND." If you buy shares just before    the     class deducts
a capital gain distribution from its NAV, you will pay the full price for
the shares and then receive a portion of the price back in the form of a
taxable distribution.
TRANSACTION DETAILS
THE FUND IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS each day the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
is open. Fidelity normally calculates each class's NAV as of the close of
business of the NYSE, normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
A CLASS'S NAV is the value of a single share. The NAV of each class is
computed by adding that class's pro rata share of the value of the fund's
investments, cash, and other assets, subtracting that class's pro rata
share of the value of the fund's liabilities, subtracting the liabilities
allocated to that class, and dividing the result by the number of shares of
that class that are outstanding.
The fund's assets are valued primarily on the basis of market quotations,
if available. Since market quotations are often unavailable, assets are
usually valued by a method that the Board of Trustees believes accurately
reflects fair value.
THE OFFERING PRICE (price to buy one share) and REDEMPTION PRICE (price to
sell one share) are the Initial Class's NAV. 
WHEN YOU SIGN YOUR ACCOUNT APPLICATION, you will be asked to certify that
your social security or taxpayer identification number is correct and that
you are not subject to 31% backup withholding for failing to report income
to the IRS. If you violate IRS regulations, the IRS can require the fund to
withhold 31% of your taxable distributions and redemptions.
YOU MAY INITIATE MANY TRANSACTIONS BY TELEPHONE. Fidelity may only be
liable for losses resulting from unauthorized transactions if it does not
follow reasonable procedures designed to verify the identity of the caller.
Fidelity will request personalized security codes or other information, and
may also record calls. You should verify the accuracy of the confirmation
statements immediately after receipt. If you do not want the ability to
redeem and exchange by telephone, call Fidelity for instructions.
IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO REACH FIDELITY BY PHONE (for example, during periods
of unusual market activity), consider placing your order by mail or by
visiting a Fidelity Investor Center.
THE FUND RESERVES THE RIGHT TO SUSPEND THE OFFERING OF SHARES for a period
of time. The fund also reserves the right to reject any specific purchase
order, including certain purchases by exchange. See "Exchange Restrictions"
on page . Purchase orders may be refused if, in FMR's opinion, they would
disrupt management of the fund.
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO BUY ADDITIONAL SHARES, your order will be
processed at the next offering price calculated after your order is
received and accepted. Note the following: 
(small solid bullet) All of your purchases must be made in U.S. dollars and
checks must be drawn on U.S. banks. 
(small solid bullet) Fidelity does not accept cash. 
(small solid bullet) When making a purchase with more than one check, each
check must have a value of at least $50.
(small solid bullet) The fund reserves the right to limit the number of
checks processed at one time.
(small solid bullet) If your check does not clear, your purchase will be
canceled and you could be liable for any losses or fees the fund or the
transfer agent has incurred.
(small solid bullet) Other Purchases: You begin to earn dividends as of the
first business day following the day of your purchase.
TO AVOID THE COLLECTION PERIOD associated with check and Money Line
purchases, consider buying shares by bank wire, U.S. Postal money order,
U.S. Treasury check, Federal Reserve check, or direct deposit instead.
YOU MAY BUY OR SELL SHARES OF THE FUND THROUGH AN INVESTMENT PROFESSIONAL,
INCLUDING A BROKER, who may charge you a transaction fee for this service.
If you invest through an investment professional, read your investment
professional's program materials for any additional service features or
fees that may apply. Certain features of the fund, such as the minimum
subsequent investment amounts, may be modified.
CERTAIN FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS that have entered into sales agreements with
FDC may enter confirmed purchase orders on behalf of customers by phone,
with payment to follow no later than the time when the class is priced on
the following business day. If payment is not received by that time, the
financial institution could be held liable for resulting fees or losses.
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO SELL SHARES, your shares will be sold at the
next NAV calculated after your order is received and accepted. Note the
following: 
(small solid bullet) Normally, redemption proceeds will be mailed to you on
the next business day, but if making immediate payment could adversely
affect the fund, it may take up to seven days to pay you. 
(small solid bullet) Shares will earn dividends through the date of
redemption; however, shares redeemed on a Friday or prior to a holiday will
continue to earn dividends until the next business day.
(small solid bullet) Fidelity Money Line redemptions generally will be
credited to your bank account on the second or third business day after
your phone call.
(small solid bullet) The fund may hold payment on redemptions until it is
reasonably satisfied that investments made by check or Fidelity Money Line
have been collected, which can take up to seven business days.
(small solid bullet) Remember that if you redeem all of your Initial Class
shares, your account will be closed and you will not be able to purchase
new Initial Class shares of the fund.
(small solid bullet) Redemptions may be suspended or payment dates
postponed when the NYSE is closed (other than weekends or holidays), when
trading on the NYSE is restricted, or as permitted by the SEC.
(small solid bullet) If you sell shares by writing a check and the amount
of the check is greater than the value of your account, your check will be
returned to you and you may be subject to additional charges.
FIDELITY RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DEDUCT AN ANNUAL MAINTENANCE FEE of $12.00
from accounts with a value of less than $2,500, subject to an annual
maximum charge of $60.00 per shareholder. It is expected that accounts will
be valued on the second Friday in November of each year. Accounts opened
after September 30 will not be subject to the fee for that year. The fee,
which is payable to the transfer agent, is designed to offset in part the
relatively higher costs of servicing smaller accounts. The fee will not be
deducted from retirement accounts (except non-prototype retirement
accounts), accounts using regular investment plans, or if total assets in
Fidelity funds exceed $50,000. Eligibility for the $50,000 waiver is
determined by aggregating Fidelity mutual fund accounts maintained by FSC
or FBSI which are registered under the same social security number or which
list the same social security number for the custodian of a Uniform
Gifts/Transfers to Minors Act account.
IF YOUR ACCOUNT BALANCE FALLS BELOW $1,000, you will be given 30 days'
notice to reestablish the minimum balance. If you do not increase your
balance, Fidelity reserves the right to close your account and send the
proceeds to you. Your shares will be redeemed at the NAV on the day your
account is closed. 
FIDELITY MAY CHARGE A FEE FOR SPECIAL SERVICES, such as providing
historical account documents, that are beyond the normal scope of its
services. 
FDC may, at its own expense, provide promotional incentives to qualified
recipients who support the sale of shares of the fund without reimbursement
from the fund. Qualified recipients are securities dealers who have sold
fund shares or others, including banks and other financial institutions,
under special arrangements in connection with FDC's sales activities. In
some instances, these incentives may be offered only to certain
institutions whose representatives provide services in connection with the
sale or expected sale of significant amounts of shares.
EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS
As a shareholder, you have the privilege of exchanging your Initial Class
shares for shares of other Fidelity funds. However, you should note the
following:
(small solid bullet) The fund you are exchanging into must be registered
for sale in your state.
(small solid bullet) You may only exchange between accounts that are
registered in the same name, address, and taxpayer identification number.
(small solid bullet) Before exchanging into a fund, read its prospectus.
(small solid bullet) If you exchange into a fund with a sales charge, you
pay the percentage-point difference between that fund's sales charge and
any sales charge you have previously paid in connection with the shares you
are exchanging. For example, if you had already paid a sales charge of 2%
on your shares and you exchange them into a fund with a 3% sales charge,
you would pay an additional 1% sales charge.
(small solid bullet) Exchanges may have tax consequences for you.
(small solid bullet) Because excessive trading can hurt fund performance
and shareholders, the fund reserves the right to temporarily or permanently
terminate the exchange privilege of any investor who makes more than four
exchanges out of the fund per calendar year. Accounts under common
ownership or control, including accounts with the same taxpayer
identification number, will be counted together for purposes of the four
exchange limit.
(small solid bullet) The fund reserves the right to refuse exchange
purchases by any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be
unable to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment
objective and policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely
affected.
(small solid bullet) Your exchanges may be restricted or refused if the
fund receives or anticipates simultaneous orders affecting significant
portions of the fund's assets. In particular, a pattern of exchanges that
coincides with a "market timing" strategy may be disruptive to the fund.
Although the fund will attempt to give you prior notice whenever it is
reasonably able to do so, it may impose these restrictions at any time. The
fund reserves the right to terminate or modify the exchange privilege in
the future.
OTHER FUNDS MAY HAVE DIFFERENT EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS, and may impose
administrative fees of up to $7.50 and redemption fees of up to 1.50% on
exchanges. Check each fund's prospectus for details.
No dealer, sales representative, or any other person has been authorized to
give any information or to make any representations, other than those
contained in this Prospectus and in the related SAI, in connection with the
offer contained in this Prospectus. If given or made, such other
information or representations must not be relied upon as having been
authorized by the fund or FDC. This Prospectus and the related SAI do not
constitute an offer by the fund or by FDC to sell or to buy shares of the
fund to any person to whom it is unlawful to make such offer.
 
 
 
 
 
This prospectus is printed on recycled paper using soy-based inks.
FIDELITY MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
 
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
FORM N-1A         
 
ITEM NUMBER   STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SECTION   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>     <C>       <C>                            <C>                                                
10,11             ............................   Cover Page; Table of Contents                      
 
12                ............................   *                                                  
 
13      a - c     ............................   Investment Policies and Limitations                
 
        d         ............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
14      a - c     ............................   Trustees and Officers                              
 
15      a         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        b - c     ............................   Description of the Trust; Trustees and Officers    
 
16      a(i)      ............................   FMR                                                
 
         (ii)     ............................   Trustees and Officers                              
 
        (iii),b   ............................   Management Contract;                               
 
        c         ............................   Management Contract                                
 
        d         ............................   *                                                  
 
        e         ............................   *                                                  
 
        f         ............................   Distribution and Service Plans                     
 
        g         ............................   *                                                  
 
        h         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        i         ............................   Contracts with FMR Affiliates                      
 
17      a,b,c,d   ............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
        e         ............................   *                                                  
 
18      a         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        b         ............................   *                                                  
 
19      a         ............................   Additional Purchase, Exchange and Redemption       
                                                 Information                                        
 
        b         ............................   Additional Purchase, Exchange and Redemption       
                                                 Information; Valuation                             
 
        c         ............................   *                                                  
 
20                ............................   Distributions and Taxes                            
 
21      a, b      ............................   Contracts with FMR Affiliates; Distribution and    
                                                 Service Plans                                      
 
        c         ............................   *                                                  
 
22                ............................   Performance; Appendix                              
 
23                ............................   Financial Statements                               
 
</TABLE>
 
* Not Applicable
 
FIDELITY    ADVISOR     MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
   INSTITUTIONAL CLASS    
A FUND OF FIDELITY MUNICIPAL TRUST
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
   JUNE 30, 1996    
This Statement    of Additional Information (SAI)     is not a prospectus
but should be read in conjunction with the fund's current Prospectus (dated
   June 30, 1996)     for    Institutional Class shares.      Please retain
this document for future reference. The fund's financial statements and
financial highlights, included in the Annual Report for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1995, are incorporated herein by reference. To obtain an
additional copy of    this     SAI   ,     the Prospectus   ,     or the
Annual Report, please contact Fidelity Distributors Corporation   , 82
Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109 or your investment
professional.    
TABLE OF CONTENTS                                                  PAGE        
 
                                                                               
 
Investment Policies and Limitations                                   2        
 
Portfolio Transactions                                                8        
 
Valuation                                                             9        
 
Performance                                                           10       
 
Additional Purchase   , Exchange,     and Redemption Information      15       
 
Distributions and Taxes                                               17       
 
FMR                                                                   18       
 
Trustees and Officers                                                 19       
 
Management Contract                                                   21       
 
   Contracts with FMR Affiliates                                      23       
 
Di   stribution and Service Plans                                     24       
 
Description of the Trust                                              25       
 
Financial Statements                                                  26       
 
Appendix                                                              26       
 
INVESTMENT ADVISER
Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR)
DISTRIBUTOR
Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC)
TRANSFER AGENT 
UMB Bank, n.a. (UMB)
   AMUNI-ptb-0696    
INVESTMENT POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS
The following policies and limitations supplement those set forth in the
Prospectus. Unless otherwise noted, whenever an investment policy or
limitation states a maximum percentage of the fund's assets that may be
invested in any security or other asset, or sets forth a policy regarding
quality standards, such standard or percentage limitation will be
determined immediately after and as a result of the fund's acquisition of
such security or other asset. Accordingly, any subsequent change in values,
net assets, or other circumstances will not be considered when determining
whether the investment complies with the fund's investment policies and
limitations.
The fund's fundamental investment policies and limitations cannot be
changed without approval by a "majority of the outstanding voting
securities" (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (1940 Act))
of the fund. However, except for the fundamental investment limitations
listed below, the investment policies and limitations described in this SAI
are not fundamental and may be changed without shareholder approval. THE
FOLLOWING ARE THE FUND'S FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS SET FORTH IN
THEIR ENTIRETY. THE FUND MAY NOT:
(1) with respect to 75% of the fund's total assets, purchase the securities
of any issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a result,
(a) more than 5% of the fund's total assets would be invested in the
securities of that issuer, or (b) the fund would hold more than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of that issuer;
(2) issue senior securities, except as permitted under the Investment
Company Act of 1940;
(3) borrow money, except that the fund may borrow money for temporary or
emergency purposes (not for leveraging or investment) in an amount not
exceeding 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) less
liabilities (other than borrowings). Any borrowings that come to exceed
this amount will be reduced within three days (not including Sundays and
holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 33 1/3% limitation;
(4) underwrite securities issued by others, except to the extent that the
fund may be considered an underwriter within the meaning of the Securities
Act of 1933 in the disposition of restricted securities;
(5) purchase the securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities, or tax-exempt obligations issued or guaranteed by a U.S.
territory or possession or a state or local government, or a political
subdivision of any of the foregoing) if, as a result, more than 25% of the
fund's total assets would be invested in securities of companies whose
principal business activities are in the same industry;
(6) purchase or sell real estate unless acquired as a result of ownership
of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent the fund
from investing in securities or other instruments backed by real estate or
securities of companies engaged in the real estate business);
(7) purchase or sell physical commodities unless acquired as a result of
ownership of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent
the fund from purchasing or selling options and futures contracts or from
investing in securities or other instruments backed by physical
commodities); or
(8) lend any security or make any other loan if, as a result, more than 33
1/3% of its total assets would be lent to other parties, but this
limitation does not apply to purchases of debt securities or to repurchase
agreements.
THE FOLLOWING INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS ARE NOT FUNDAMENTAL AND MAY BE CHANGED
WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL.
(i)  The fund does not currently intend to sell securities short, unless it
owns or has the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities sold short, and provided that transactions in futures
contracts and options are not deemed to constitute selling securities
short.
(ii)  The fund does not currently intend to purchase securities on margin,
except that the fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary
for the clearance of transactions, and provided that margin payments in
connection with futures contracts and options on futures contracts shall
not constitute purchasing securities on margin.
(iii) The fund may borrow money only (a) from a bank or from a registered
investment company or portfolio for which FMR or an affiliate serves as
investment adviser, or (b) by engaging in reverse repurchase agreements
with any party (reverse repurchase agreements are treated as borrowings for
purposes of fundamental investment limitation (3)). The fund will not
purchase any security while borrowings representing more than 5% of its
total assets are outstanding. The fund will not borrow from other funds
advised by FMR or its affiliates if total outstanding borrowings
immediately after such borrowing would exceed 15% of the fund's total
assets.
(iv) The fund does not currently intend to purchase any security if, as a
result, more than 10% of its net assets would be invested in securities
that are deemed to be illiquid because they are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions on resale or because they cannot be sold or
disposed of in the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices
at which they are valued.
(v) The fund does not currently intend to engage in repurchase agreements
or make loans, but this limitation does not apply to purchases of debt
securities.
(vi) The fund does not currently intend to (a) purchase securities of other
investment companies, except in the open market where no commission except
the ordinary broker's commission is paid, or (b) purchase or retain
securities issued by other open-end investment companies. Limitations (a)
and (b) do not apply to securities received as dividends, through offers of
exchange, or as a result of a reorganization, consolidation, or merger.
(vii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by domestic or foreign
governments or political subdivisions thereof) if, as a result, more than
5% of its total assets would be invested in the securities of business
enterprises that, including predecessors, have a record of less than three
years of continuous operation.
(viii) The fund does not currently intend to invest in oil, gas, or other
mineral exploration or development programs or leases.
(ix) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer if those officers and Trustees of the trust and those officers and
directors of FMR who individually own more than 1/2 of 1% of the securities
of such issuer together own more than 5% of such issuer's securities.
For purposes of limitations (1) and (5), FMR identifies the issuer of a
security depending on its terms and conditions. In identifying the issuer,
FMR will consider the entity or entities responsible for payment of
interest and repayment of principal and the source of such payments; the
way in which assets and revenues of an issuing political subdivision are
separated from those of other political entities; and whether a
governmental body is guaranteeing the security.
For purposes of limitation (vii), pass-through entities and other special
purpose vehicles or pools of financial assets, such as issuers of
asset-backed securities or investment companies, are not considered
"business enterprises."
For the fund's limitations on futures and options transactions, see the
section entitled "Futures and Options" beginning on page .
AFFILIATED BANK TRANSACTIONS. The fund may engage in transactions with
financial institutions that are, or may be considered to be, "affiliated
persons" of the fund under the 1940 Act. These transactions may include
repurchase agreements with custodian banks; short-term obligations of, and
repurchase agreements with, the 50 largest U.S. banks (measured by
deposits); municipal securities; U.S. Government securities with affiliated
financial institutions that are primary dealers in these securities;
short-term currency transactions; and short-term borrowings. In accordance
with exemptive orders issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), the Board of Trustees has established and periodically reviews
procedures applicable to transactions involving affiliated financial
institutions.
DELAYED-DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS. The fund may buy and sell securities on a
delayed-delivery or when-issued basis. These transactions involve a
commitment by the fund to purchase or sell specific securities at a
predetermined price or yield, with payment and delivery taking place after
the customary settlement period for that type of security. Typically, no
interest accrues to the purchaser until the security is delivered. The fund
may receive fees for entering into delayed-delivery transactions.
When purchasing securities on a delayed-delivery basis, the fund assumes
the rights and risks of ownership, including the risk of price and yield
fluctuations. Because the fund is not required to pay for securities until
the delivery date, these risks are in addition to the risks associated with
the fund's other investments. If the fund remains substantially fully
invested at a time when delayed-delivery purchases are outstanding, the
delayed-delivery purchases may result in a form of leverage. When
delayed-delivery purchases are outstanding, the fund will set aside
appropriate liquid assets in a segregated custodial account to cover its
purchase obligations. When the fund has sold a security on a
delayed-delivery basis, the fund does not participate in further gains or
losses with respect to the security. If the other party to a
delayed-delivery transaction fails to deliver or pay for the securities,
the fund could miss a favorable price or yield opportunity, or could suffer
a loss.
The fund may renegotiate delayed-delivery transactions after they are
entered into, and may sell underlying securities before they are delivered,
which may result in capital gains or losses. 
FEDERALLY TAXABLE OBLIGATIONS. Under normal conditions, the fund does not
intend to invest in securities whose interest is federally taxable.
However, from time to time on a temporary basis, the fund may invest a
portion of its assets in fixed-income obligations whose interest is subject
to federal income tax.
Should the fund invest in federally taxable obligations, it would purchase
securities that in FMR's judgment are of high quality. These would include
obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its agencies or
instrumentalities; obligations of domestic banks; and repurchase
agreements. The fund's standards for high-quality, taxable obligations are
essentially the same as those described by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
(Moody's) in rating corporate obligations within its two highest ratings of
Prime-1 and Prime-2, and those described by Standard & Poor's        (S&P)
in rating corporate obligations within its two highest ratings of A-1 and
A-2.
Proposals to restrict or eliminate the federal income tax exemption for
interest on municipal obligations are introduced before Congress from time
to time. Proposals also may be introduced before state legislatures that
would affect the state tax treatment of the fund's distributions. If such
proposals were enacted, the availability of municipal obligations and the
value of the fund's holdings would be affected and the Trustees would
reevaluate the fund's investment objective and policies. 
FUTURES AND OPTIONS. The following sections pertain to futures and options:
Asset Coverage for Futures and Options Positions, Combined Positions,
Correlation of Price Changes, Futures Contracts, Futures Margin Payments,
Limitations on Futures and Options Transactions, Liquidity of Options and
Futures Contracts, OTC Options, Purchasing Put and Call Options, and
Writing Put and Call Options.
ASSET COVERAGE FOR FUTURES AND OPTIONS POSITIONS. The fund will comply with
guidelines established by the SEC with respect to coverage of options and
futures strategies by mutual funds, and   ,     if the guidelines so
require   ,     will set aside appropriate liquid assets in a segregated
custodial account in the amount prescribed. Securities held in a segregated
account cannot be sold while the futures or option strategy is outstanding,
unless they are replaced with other suitable assets. As a result, there is
a possibility that segregation of a large percentage of the fund's assets
could impede portfolio management or the fund's ability to meet redemption
requests or other current obligations.
COMBINED POSITIONS. The fund may purchase and write options in combination
with each other, or in combination with futures or forward contracts, to
adjust the risk and return characteristics of the overall position. For
example, the fund may purchase a put option and write a call option on the
same underlying instrument, in order to construct a combined position whose
risk and return characteristics are similar to selling a futures contract.
Another possible combined position would involve writing a call option at
one strike price and buying a call option at a lower price, in order to
reduce the risk of the written call option in the event of a substantial
price increase. Because combined options positions involve multiple trades,
they result in higher transaction costs and may be more difficult to open
and close out.
CORRELATION OF PRICE CHANGES. Because there are a limited number of types
of exchange-traded options and futures contracts, it is likely that the
standardized contracts available will not match the fund's current or
anticipated investments exactly. The fund may invest in options and futures
contracts based on securities with different issuers, maturities, or other
characteristics from the securities in which it typically invests, which
involves a risk that the options or futures position will not track the
performance of the fund's other investments.
Options and futures prices can also diverge from the prices of their
underlying instruments, even if the underlying instruments match the fund's
investments well. Options and futures prices are affected by such factors
as current and anticipated short-term interest rates, changes in volatility
of the underlying instrument, and the time remaining until expiration of
the contract, which may not affect security prices the same way. Imperfect
correlation may also result from differing levels of demand in the options
and futures markets and the securities markets, from structural differences
in how options and futures and securities are traded, or from imposition of
daily price fluctuation limits or trading halts. The fund may purchase or
sell options and futures contracts with a greater or lesser value than the
securities it wishes to hedge or intends to purchase in order to attempt to
compensate for differences in volatility between the contract and the
securities, although this may not be successful in all cases. If price
changes in the fund's options or futures positions are poorly correlated
with its other investments, the positions may fail to produce anticipated
gains or result in losses that are not offset by gains in other
investments.
FUTURES CONTRACTS. When the fund purchases a futures contract, it agrees to
purchase a specified underlying instrument at a specified future date. When
the fund sells a futures contract, it agrees to sell the underlying
instrument at a specified future date. The price at which the purchase and
sale will take place is fixed when the fund enters into the contract. Some
currently available futures contracts are based on specific securities,
such as U.S. Treasury bonds or notes, and some are based on indices of
securities prices, such as the Bond Buyer Municipal Bond Index. Futures can
be held until their delivery dates, or can be closed out before then if a
liquid secondary market is available.
The value of a futures contract tends to increase and decrease in tandem
with the value of its underlying instrument. Therefore, purchasing futures
contracts will tend to increase the fund's exposure to positive and
negative price fluctuations in the underlying instrument, much as if it had
purchased the underlying instrument directly. When the fund sells a futures
contract, by contrast, the value of its futures position will tend to move
in a direction contrary to the market. Selling futures contracts,
therefore, will tend to offset both positive and negative market price
changes, much as if the underlying instrument had been sold.
FUTURES MARGIN PAYMENTS. The purchaser or seller of a futures contract is
not required to deliver or pay for the underlying instrument unless the
contract is held until the delivery date. However, both the purchaser and
seller are required to deposit "initial margin" with a futures broker,
known as a futures commission merchant (FCM), when the contract is entered
into. Initial margin deposits are typically equal to a percentage of the
contract's value. If the value of either party's position declines, that
party will be required to make additional "variation margin" payments to
settle the change in value on a daily basis. The party that has a gain may
be entitled to receive all or a portion of this amount. Initial and
variation margin payments do not constitute purchasing securities on margin
for purposes of the fund's investment limitations. In the event of the
bankruptcy of an FCM that holds margin on behalf of the fund, the fund may
be entitled to return of margin owed to it only in proportion to the amount
received by the FCM's other customers, potentially resulting in losses to
the fund.
LIMITATIONS ON FUTURES AND OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS. The fund has filed a
notice of eligibility for exclusion from the definition of the term
"commodity pool operator" with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) and the National Futures Association, which regulate trading in the
futures markets. The fund intends to comply with Rule 4.5 under the
Commodity Exchange Act, which limits the extent to which the fund can
commit assets to initial margin deposits and option premiums.
In addition, the fund will not: (a) sell futures contracts, purchase put
options, or write call options if, as a result, more than 25% of the fund's
total assets would be hedged with futures and options under normal
conditions; (b) purchase futures contracts or write put options if, as a
result, the fund's total obligations upon settlement or exercise of
purchased futures contracts and written put options would exceed 25% of its
total assets; or (c) purchase call options if, as a result, the current
value of option premiums for call options purchased by the fund would
exceed 5% of the fund's total assets. These limitations do not apply to
options attached to or acquired or traded together with their underlying
securities, and do not apply to securities that incorporate features
similar to options.
The above limitations on the fund's investments in futures contracts and
options, and the fund's policies regarding futures contracts and options
discussed elsewhere in this Statement of Additional Information are not
fundamental policies and may be changed as regulatory agencies permit.
LIQUIDITY OF OPTIONS AND FUTURES CONTRACTS. There is no assurance a liquid
secondary market will exist for any particular options or futures contract
at any particular time. Options may have relatively low trading volume and
liquidity if their strike prices are not close to the underlying
instrument's current price. In addition, exchanges may establish daily
price fluctuation limits for options and futures contracts, and may halt
trading if a contract's price moves upward or downward more than the limit
in a given day. On volatile trading days when the price fluctuation limit
is reached or a trading halt is imposed, it may be impossible for the fund
to enter into new positions or close out existing positions. If the
secondary market for a contract is not liquid because of price fluctuation
limits or otherwise, it could prevent prompt liquidation of unfavorable
positions, and potentially could require the fund to continue to hold a
position until delivery or expiration regardless of changes in its value.
As a result, the fund's access to other assets held to cover its options or
futures positions could also be impaired.
OTC OPTIONS. Unlike exchange-traded options, which are standardized with
respect to the underlying instrument, expiration date, contract size, and
strike price, the terms of over-the-counter (OTC) options (options not
traded on exchanges) generally are established through negotiation with the
other party to the option contract. While this type of arrangement allows
the fund greater flexibility to tailor an option to its needs, OTC options
generally involve greater credit risk than exchange-traded options, which
are guaranteed by the clearing organization of the exchanges where they are
traded.
PURCHASING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. By purchasing a put option, the fund
obtains the right (but not the obligation) to sell the option's underlying
instrument at a fixed strike price. In return for this right, the fund pays
the current market price for the option (known as the option premium).
Options have various types of underlying instruments, including specific
securities, indices of securities prices, and futures contracts. The fund
may terminate its position in a put option it has purchased by allowing it
to expire or by exercising the option. If the option is allowed to expire,
the fund will lose the entire premium it paid. If the fund exercises the
option, it completes the sale of the underlying instrument at the strike
price. The fund may also terminate a put option position by closing it out
in the secondary market at its current price, if a liquid secondary market
exists.
The buyer of a typical put option can expect to realize a gain if security
prices fall substantially. However, if the underlying instrument's price
does not fall enough to offset the cost of purchasing the option, a put
buyer can expect to suffer a loss (limited to the amount of the premium
paid, plus related transaction costs).
The features of call options are essentially the same as those of put
options, except that the purchaser of a call option obtains the right to
purchase, rather than sell, the underlying instrument at the option's
strike price. A call buyer typically attempts to participate in potential
price increases of the underlying instrument with risk limited to the cost
of the option if security prices fall. At the same time, the buyer can
expect to suffer a loss if security prices do not rise sufficiently to
offset the cost of the option.
WRITING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. When the fund writes a put option, it takes
the opposite side of the transaction from the option's purchaser. In return
for receipt of the premium, the fund assumes the obligation to pay the
strike price for the option's underlying instrument if the other party to
the option chooses to exercise it. When writing an option on a futures
contract, the fund will be required to make margin payments to an FCM as
described above for futures contracts. The fund may seek to terminate its
position in a put option it writes before exercise by closing out the
option in the secondary market at its current price. If the secondary
market is not liquid for a put option the fund has written, however, the
fund must continue to be prepared to pay the strike price while the option
is outstanding, regardless of price changes, and must continue to set aside
assets to cover its position.
If security prices rise, a put writer would generally expect to profit,
although its gain would be limited to the amount of the premium it
received. If security prices remain the same over time, it is likely that
the writer will also profit, because it should be able to close out the
option at a lower price. If security prices fall, the put writer would
expect to suffer a loss. This loss should be less than the loss from
purchasing the underlying instrument directly, however, because the premium
received for writing the option should mitigate the effects of the decline.
Writing a call option obligates the fund to sell or deliver the option's
underlying instrument, in return for the strike price, upon exercise of the
option. The characteristics of writing call options are similar to those of
writing put options, except that writing calls generally is a profitable
strategy if prices remain the same or fall. Through receipt of the option
premium, a call writer mitigates the effects of a price decline. At the
same time, because a call writer must be prepared to deliver the underlying
instrument in return for the strike price, even if its current value is
greater, a call writer gives up some ability to participate in security
price increases.
ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS are investments that cannot be sold or disposed of in
the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices at which they
are valued. Under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, FMR determines
the liquidity of the fund's investments and, through reports from FMR, the
Board monitors investments in illiquid instruments. In determining the
liquidity of the fund's investments, FMR may consider various factors,
including (1) the frequency of trades and quotations, (2) the number of
dealers and prospective purchasers in the marketplace, (3) dealer
undertakings to make a market, (4) the nature of the security (including
any demand or tender features), and (5) the nature of the marketplace for
trades (including the ability to assign or offset the fund's rights and
obligations relating to the investment).
Investments currently considered by the fund to be illiquid include
over-the-counter options. Also, FMR may determine some restricted
securities and municipal lease obligations to be illiquid. However, with
respect to over-the-counter options the fund writes, all or a portion of
the value of the underlying instrument may be illiquid depending on the
assets held to cover the option and the nature and terms of any agreement
the fund may have to close out the option before expiration.
In the absence of market quotations, illiquid investments are priced at
fair value as determined in good faith by a committee appointed by the
Board of Trustees. If through a change in values, net assets, or other
circumstances, the fund were in a position where more than 10% of its net
assets was invested in illiquid securities, it would seek to take
appropriate steps to protect liquidity.
INDEXED SECURITIES. The fund may purchase securities whose prices are
indexed to the prices of other securities, securities indices, or other
financial indicators. Indexed securities typically, but not always, are
debt securities or deposits whose value at maturity or coupon rate is
determined by reference to a specific instrument or statistic. Indexed
securities may have principal payments as well as coupon payments that
depend on the performance of one or more interest rates. Their coupon rates
or principal payments may change by several percentage points for every 1%
interest rate change. One example of indexed securities is inverse
floaters.
The performance of indexed securities depends to a great extent on the
performance of the security or other instrument to which they are indexed,
and may also be influenced by interest rate changes. At the same time,
indexed securities are subject to the credit risks associated with the
issuer of the security, and their values may decline substantially if the
issuer's creditworthiness deteriorates. Indexed securities may be more
volatile than the underlying instruments.
INTERFUND BORROWING AND LENDING PROGRAM. Pursuant to an exemptive order
issued by the SEC, the fund has received permission to lend money to, and
borrow money from, other funds advised by FMR or its affiliates, but it
currently intends to participate in this program only as a borrower.
Interfund borrowings normally extend overnight but can have a maximum
duration of seven days. A fund will borrow through the program only when
the costs are equal to or lower than the costs of bank loans. Loans may be
called on one day's notice, and a fund may have to borrow from a bank at a
higher interest rate if an interfund loan is called or not renewed. 
INVERSE FLOATERS have variable interest rates that typically move in the
opposite direction from prevailing short-term interest rate levels - rising
when prevailing short-term interest rates fall, and vice versa. This
interest rate feature can make the prices of inverse floaters considerably
more volatile than bonds with comparable maturities.
MUNICIPAL LEASES and participation interests therein may take the form of a
lease, an installment purchase, or a conditional sale contract and are
issued by state and local governments and authorities to acquire land or a
wide variety of equipment and facilities. Generally, the fund will not hold
such obligations directly as a lessor of the property, but will purchase a
participation interest in a municipal obligation from a bank or other third
party. A participation interest gives the fund a specified, undivided
interest in the obligation in proportion to its purchased interest in the
total amount of the obligation.
Municipal leases frequently have risks distinct from those associated with
general obligation or revenue bonds. State constitutions and statutes set
forth requirements that states or municipalities must meet to incur debt.
These may include voter referenda, interest rate limits, or public sale
requirements. Leases, installment purchases, or conditional sale contracts
(which normally provide for title to the leased asset to pass to the
governmental issuer) have evolved as a means for governmental issuers to
acquire property and equipment without meeting their constitutional and
statutory requirements for the issuance of debt. Many leases and contracts
include "non-appropriation clauses" providing that the governmental issuer
has no obligation to make future payments under the lease or contract
unless money is appropriated for such purposes by the appropriate
legislative body on a yearly or other periodic basis. Non-appropriation
clauses free the issuer from debt issuance limitations. 
MUNICIPAL MARKET DISRUPTION RISK. The value of municipal securities may be
affected by uncertainties in the municipal market related to legislation or
litigation involving the taxation of municipal securities or the rights of
municipal securities holders in the event of a bankruptcy. Municipal
bankruptcies are relatively rare, and certain provisions of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code governing such bankruptcies are unclear and remain
untested. Further, the application of state law to municipal issuers could
produce varying results among the states or among municipal securities
issuers within a state. These legal uncertainties could affect the
municipal securities market generally, certain specific segments of the
market, or the relative credit quality of particular securities. Any of
these effects could have a significant impact on the prices of some or all
of the municipal securities held by a fund.
MUNICIPAL SECTORS:
ELECTRIC UTILITIES INDUSTRY. The electric utilities industry has been
experiencing, and will continue to experience, increased competitive
pressures. Federal legislation in the last two years will open transmission
access to any electricity supplier, although it is not presently known to
what extent competition will evolve. Other risks include: (a) the
availability and cost of fuel, (b) the availability and cost of capital,
(c) the effects of conservation on energy demand, (d) the effects of
rapidly changing environmental, safety, and licensing requirements, and
other federal, state, and local regulations, (e) timely and sufficient rate
increases, and (f) opposition to nuclear power.
HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY. The health care industry is subject to regulatory
action by a number of private and governmental agencies, including federal,
state, and local governmental agencies. A major source of revenues for the
health care industry is payments from the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
As a result, the industry is sensitive to legislative changes and
reductions in governmental spending for such programs. Numerous other
factors may affect the industry, such as general and local economic
conditions; demand for services; expenses (including malpractice insurance
premiums); and competition among health care providers. In the future, the
following elements may adversely affect health care facility operations:
adoption of legislation proposing a national health insurance program;
other state or local health care reform measures; medical and technological
advances which dramatically alter the need for health services or the way
in which such services are delivered; changes in medical coverage which
alter the traditional fee-for-service revenue stream; and efforts by
employers, insurers, and governmental agencies to reduce the costs of
health insurance and health care services.
HOUSING. Housing revenue bonds are generally issued by a state, county,
city, local housing authority, or other public agency. They generally are
secured by the revenues derived from mortgages purchased with the proceeds
of the bond issue. It is extremely difficult to predict the supply of
available mortgages to be purchased with the proceeds of an issue or the
future cash flow from the underlying mortgages. Consequently, there are
risks that proceeds will exceed supply, resulting in early retirement of
bonds, or that homeowner repayments will create an irregular cash flow.
Many factors may affect the financing of multi-family housing projects,
including acceptable completion of construction, proper management,
occupancy and rent levels, economic conditions, and changes to current laws
and regulations.
REFUNDING CONTRACTS. The fund may purchase securities on a when-issued
basis in connection with the refinancing of an issuer's outstanding
indebtedness. Refunding contracts require the issuer to sell and the fund
to buy refunded municipal obligations at a stated price and yield on a
settlement date that may be several months or several years in the future.
The fund generally will not be obligated to pay the full purchase price if
it fails to perform under a refunding contract. Instead, refunding
contracts generally provide for payment of liquidated damages to the issuer
(currently 15-20% of the purchase price). The fund may secure its
obligations under a refunding contract by depositing collateral or a letter
of credit equal to the liquidated damages provisions of the refunding
contract. When required by SEC guidelines, the fund will place liquid
assets in a segregated custodial account equal in amount to its obligations
under refunding contracts.
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a repurchase agreement, the fund purchases a
security and simultaneously commits to sell that security back to the
original seller at an agreed-upon price. The resale price reflects the
purchase price plus an agreed-upon incremental amount which is unrelated to
the coupon rate or maturity of the purchased security. To protect the fund
from risk that the original seller will not fulfill its obligation, the
securities are held in an account of the fund at a bank, marked-to-market
daily, and maintained at a value at least equal to the sale price plus the
accrued incremental amount. While it does not presently appear possible to
eliminate all risks from these transactions (particularly the possibility
that the value of the underlying security will be less than the resale
price, as well as delays and costs to the fund in connection with
bankruptcy proceedings), it is the fund's current policy to engage in
repurchase agreement transactions with parties whose creditworthiness has
been reviewed and found satisfactory by FMR.
RESTRICTED SECURITIES generally can be sold in privately negotiated
transactions, pursuant to an exemption from registration under the
Securities Act of 1933, or in a registered public offering. Where
registration is required, the fund may be obligated to pay all or part of
the registration expense and a considerable period may elapse between the
time it decides to seek registration and the time it may be permitted to
sell a security under an effective registration statement. If, during such
a period, adverse market conditions were to develop, the fund might obtain
a less favorable price than prevailed when it decided to seek registration
of the security.
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the fund
sells a portfolio instrument to another party, such as a bank or
broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase the instrument
at a particular price and time. While a reverse repurchase agreement is
outstanding, the fund will maintain appropriate liquid assets in a
segregated custodial account to cover its obligation under the agreement.
The fund will enter into reverse repurchase agreements only with parties
whose creditworthiness has been found satisfactory by FMR. Such
transactions may increase fluctuations in the market value of the fund's
assets and may be viewed as a form of leverage.
STANDBY COMMITMENTS are puts that entitle holders to same-day settlement at
an exercise price equal to the amortized cost of the underlying security
plus accrued interest, if any, at the time of exercise. The fund may
acquire standby commitments to enhance the liquidity of portfolio
securities. 
Ordinarily the fund will not transfer a standby commitment to a third
party, although it could sell the underlying municipal security to a third
party at any time. The fund may purchase standby commitments separate from
or in conjunction with the purchase of securities subject to such
commitments. In the latter case, the fund would pay a higher price for the
securities acquired, thus reducing their yield to maturity.
Issuers or financial intermediaries may obtain letters of credit or other
guarantees to support their ability to buy securities on demand. FMR may
rely upon its evaluation of a bank's credit in determining whether to
   purchase     an instrument supported by a letter of credit. In
evaluating a foreign bank's credit, FMR will consider whether adequate
public information about the bank is available and whether the bank may be
subject to unfavorable political or economic developments, currency
controls, or other governmental restrictions that might affect the bank's
ability to honor its credit commitment.
Standby commitments are subject to certain risks, including the ability of
issuers of standby commitments to pay for securities at the time the
commitments are exercised; the fact that standby commitments are not
marketable by the fund; and the possibility that the maturities of the
underlying securities may be different from those of the commitments. 
TENDER OPTION BONDS are created by coupling an intermediate- or long-term,
fixed-rate, tax-exempt bond (generally held pursuant to a custodial
arrangement) with a tender agreement that gives the holder the option to
tender the bond at its face value. As consideration for providing the
tender option, the sponsor (usually a bank, broker-dealer, or other
financial institution) receives periodic fees equal to the difference
between the bond's fixed coupon rate and the rate (determined by a
remarketing or similar agent) that would cause the bond, coupled with the
tender option, to trade at par on the date of such determination. After
payment of the tender option fee, the fund effectively holds a demand
obligation that bears interest at the prevailing short-term tax-exempt
rate. In selecting tender option bonds for the fund, FMR will consider the
creditworthiness of the issuer of the underlying bond, the custodian, and
the third party provider of the tender option. In certain instances, a
sponsor may terminate a tender option if, for example, the issuer of the
underlying bond defaults on interest payments.
VARIABLE OR FLOATING RATE OBLIGATIONS, including certain participation
interests in municipal instruments, have interest rate adjustment formulas
that help stabilize their market values. Many variable and floating rate
instruments also carry demand features that permit the fund to sell them at
par value plus accrued interest on short notice. 
In many instances bonds and participation interests have tender options or
demand features that permit the fund to tender (or put) the bonds to an
institution at periodic intervals and to receive the principal amount
thereof. The fund considers variable rate instruments structured in this
way (Participating VRDOs) to be essentially equivalent to other VRDOs it
purchases. The IRS has not ruled whether the interest on Participating
VRDOs is tax-exempt and, accordingly, the fund intends to purchase these
instruments based on opinions of bond counsel. A fund may also invest in
fixed-rate bonds that are subject to third party puts and in participation
interests in such bonds held by a bank in trust or otherwise.
ZERO COUPON BONDS do not make regular interest payments. Instead, they are
sold at a deep discount from their face value and are redeemed at face
value when they mature. Because zero coupon bonds do not pay current
income, their prices can be very volatile when interest rates change. In
calculating its daily dividend, the fund takes into account as income a
portion of the difference between a zero coupon bond's purchase price and
its face value.
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
All orders for the purchase or sale of portfolio securities are placed on
behalf of the funds by FMR pursuant to authority contained in the fund's
management contract. FMR is also responsible for the placement of
transaction orders for other investment companies and accounts for which it
or its affiliates act as investment adviser. In selecting broker-dealers,
subject to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws, FMR
considers various relevant factors, including, but not limited to, the size
and type of the transaction; the nature and character of the markets for
the security to be purchased or sold; the execution efficiency, settlement
capability, and financial condition of the broker-dealer firm; the
broker-dealer's execution services rendered on a continuing basis; and the
reasonableness of any commissions.
The fund may execute portfolio transactions with broker-dealers who provide
research and execution services to the fund or other accounts over which
FMR or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. Such services may
include advice concerning the value of securities; the advisability of
investing in, purchasing, or selling securities; and the availability of
securities or the purchasers or sellers of securities. In addition, such
broker-dealers may furnish analyses and reports concerning issuers,
industries, securities, economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy,
and performance of accounts; effect securities transactions, and perform
functions incidental thereto (such as clearance and settlement). The
selection of such broker-dealers generally is made by FMR (to the extent
possible consistent with execution considerations) based upon the quality
of research and execution services provided.
The receipt of research from broker-dealers that execute transactions on
behalf of the fund may be useful to FMR in rendering investment management
services to the fund or its other clients, and conversely, such research
provided by broker-dealers who have executed transaction orders on behalf
of other FMR clients may be useful to FMR in carrying out its obligations
to the fund. The receipt of such research has not reduced FMR's normal
independent research activities; however, it enables FMR to avoid the
additional expenses that could be incurred if FMR tried to develop
comparable information through its own efforts.
Subject to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws,
broker-dealers may receive commissions for agency transactions that are in
excess of the amount of commissions charged by other broker-dealers in
recognition of their research and execution services. In order to cause the
fund to pay such higher commissions, FMR must determine in good faith that
such commissions are reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage
and research services provided by such executing broker-dealers, viewed in
terms of a particular transaction or FMR's overall responsibilities to the
fund and its other clients. In reaching this determination, FMR will not
attempt to place a specific dollar value on the brokerage and research
services provided, or to determine what portion of the compensation should
be related to those services.
FMR is authorized to use research services provided by and to place
portfolio transactions with brokerage firms that have provided assistance
in the distribution of shares of the fund, or shares of other Fidelity
funds to the extent permitted by law. FMR may use research services
provided by and place agency transactions with Fidelity Brokerage Services,
Inc. (FBSI), a subsidiary of FMR Corp., if the commissions are fair,
reasonable, and comparable to commissions charged by non-affiliated,
qualified brokerage firms for similar services.
Section 11(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 prohibits members of
national securities exchanges from executing exchange transactions for
accounts which they or their affiliates manage, unless certain requirements
are satisfied. Pursuant to such requirements, the Board of Trustees has
authorized FBSI to execute portfolio transactions on national securities
exchanges in accordance with approved procedures and applicable SEC rules.
The Trustees periodically review FMR's performance of its responsibilities
in connection with the placement of portfolio transactions on behalf of the
fund and review the commissions paid by the fund over representative
periods of time to determine if they are reasonable in relation to the
benefits to the fund.
For the fiscal years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994, the fund's portfolio
turnover rates were 72% and 95%, respectively.
For    the     fiscal    years ended     1995, 1994, and 1993, the fund
paid no brokerage commissions.
   During the fiscal year ended 1995, the fund paid no fees to brokerage
firms that provided research services.    
From time to time the Trustees will review whether the recapture for the
benefit of the fund of some portion of the brokerage commissions or similar
fees paid by the fund on portfolio transactions is legally permissible and
advisable. The fund seeks to recapture soliciting broker-dealer fees on the
tender of portfolio securities, but at present no other recapture
arrangements are in effect. The Trustees intend to continue to review
whether recapture opportunities are available and are legally permissible
and, if so, to determine in the exercise of their business judgment whether
it would be advisable for the fund to seek such recapture.
Although the Trustees and officers of the fund are substantially the same
as those of other funds managed by FMR, investment decisions for the fund
are made independently from those of other funds managed by FMR or accounts
managed by FMR affiliates. It sometimes happens that the same security is
held in the portfolio of more than one of these funds or accounts.
Simultaneous transactions are inevitable when several funds and accounts
are managed by the same investment adviser, particularly when the same
security is suitable for the investment objective of more than one fund or
account.
When two or more funds are simultaneously engaged in the purchase or sale
of the same security, the prices and amounts are allocated in accordance
with procedures believed to be appropriate and equitable for each fund. In
some cases this system could have a detrimental effect on the price or
value of the security as far as the fund is concerned. In other cases,
however, the ability of the fund to participate in volume transactions will
produce better executions and prices for the fund. It is the current
opinion of the Trustees that the desirability of retaining FMR as
investment adviser to the fund outweighs any disadvantages that may be said
to exist from exposure to simultaneous transactions.
VALUATION
Fidelity Service Company (FSC) normally determines each class's net asset
value per share (NAV) as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
(normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). The valuation of portfolio securities is
determined as of this time for the purpose of computing each class's
NAV   .    
Portfolio securities are valued by various methods depending on the primary
market or exchange on which they trade. Fixed-income securities may also be
valued on the basis of information furnished by a pricing service that uses
a valuation matrix which incorporates both dealer-supplied valuations and
electronic data processing techniques. Use of pricing services has been
approved by the Board of Trustees. A number of pricing services are
available, and the Trustees, on the basis of an evaluation of these
services, may use various pricing services or discontinue the use of any
pricing service.
Futures contracts and options are valued on the basis of market quotations,
if available.
Securities and other assets for which there is no readily available market
value are valued in good faith by a committee appointed by the Board of
Trustees. The procedures set forth above need not be used to determine the
value of the securities owned by the fund if, in the opinion of a committee
appointed by the Board of Trustees, some other method would more accurately
reflect the fair market value of such securities.
PERFORMANCE
Each class of shares may quote performance in various ways. All performance
information supplied by the fund in advertising is historical and is not
intended to indicate future returns. Share price, yield, and total return
fluctuate in response to market conditions and other factors, and the value
of shares when redeemed may be more or less than their original cost.
YIELD CALCULATIONS. Yields for a class are computed by dividing the class's
pro rata share of the applicable interest income for a given 30-day or
one-month period, net of expenses, by the average number of shares of that
class entitled to receive distributions during the period, dividing this
figure by the class's    NAV     at the end of the period, and annualizing
the result (assuming compounding of income) in order to arrive at an annual
percentage rate. Income is calculated for purposes of yield quotations in
accordance with standardized methods applicable to all stock and bond
funds. In general, interest income is reduced with respect to bonds trading
at a premium over their par value by subtracting a portion of the premium
from income on a daily basis, and is increased with respect to bonds
trading at a discount by adding a portion of the discount to daily income.
Capital gains and losses generally are excluded from the calculation.
Income calculated for the purposes of calculating a class's yield differs
from income as determined for other accounting purposes. Because of the
different accounting methods used, and because of the compounding of income
assumed in yield calculations, a class's yield may not equal its
distribution rate, the income paid to your account, or the income reported
in the fund's financial statements.
Yield information may be useful in reviewing a class's performance and in
providing a basis for comparison with other investment alternatives.
However, each class's yield fluctuates, unlike investments that pay a fixed
interest rate over a stated period of time. When comparing investment
alternatives, investors should also note the quality and maturity of the
portfolio securities of respective investment companies they have chosen to
consider.
Investors should recognize that in periods of declining interest rates, a
class's yield will tend to be somewhat higher than prevailing market rates,
and in periods of rising interest rates, a class's yield will tend to be
somewhat lower. Also, when interest rates are falling, the inflow of net
new money to the fund from the continuous sale of its shares will likely be
invested in instruments producing lower yields than the balance of the
fund's holdings, thereby reducing a class's current yield. In periods of
rising interest rates, the opposite can be expected to occur.
Tax-equivalent yield is the rate an investor would have to earn from a
fully taxable investment before taxes to equal a class's tax-free yield.
Tax-equivalent yields are calculated by dividing a class's yield by the
result of one minus a stated federal or combined federal and state tax
rate. If only a portion of a class's yield is tax-exempt, only that portion
is adjusted in the calculation.
The following table shows the effect of a shareholder's tax status on
effective yield under federal income tax laws for 1996. It shows the
approximate yield a taxable security must provide at various income
brackets to produce after-tax yields equivalent to those of hypothetical
tax-exempt obligations yielding from 4% to    10    %. Of course, no
assurance can be given that a class will achieve any specific tax-exempt
yield. While the fund invests principally in obligations whose interest is
exempt from federal income tax, other income received by the fund may be
taxable. 
1996 TAX RATES AND TAX-EQUIVALENT YIELDS
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                <C>              <C>         <C>     <C>     <C>     <C>      <C>      <C>             <C>             
                                    Federal     If individual tax-exempt yield is:                                       
 
Taxable Income*                     Income      4%      5%      6%      7%        8%        9%           10%   
                                    Tax                                                                                
 
Single Return      Joint Return     Bracket**   Then taxable-equivalent yield is:                                       
 
$0-24,000          $0-40,100          15.0%     4.71%   5.88%   7.06%    8.24%   9.41%       10.59    %      11.76    %   
 
$24,001-58,150     $40,101-96,900     28.0%     5.56%   6.94%   8.33%    9.72%   11.11%   12.50%          13.89%          
 
$58,151-121,300    $96,901-147,700    31.0%     5.80%   7.25%   8.70%   10.14%   11.59%   13.04%          14.49%          
 
$121,301-263,750   $147,701-263,750   36.0%     6.25%   7.81%   9.38%   10.94%   12.50%   14.06%          15.63%          
 
$263,751-above     $263,751-above     39.6%     6.62%   8.28%   9.93%   11.59%   13.25%   14.90%          16.56%          
 
</TABLE>
 
* Net amount subject to federal income tax after deductions and exemptions.
Assumes ordinary income only.
** Excludes the impact of the phaseout of personal exemptions, limitations
on itemized deductions, and other credits, exclusions, and adjustments
which may increase a taxpayer's marginal tax rate. An increase in a
shareholder's marginal tax rate would increase that shareholder's
tax-equivalent yield.
The fund may invest a portion of its assets in obligations that are subject
to federal income tax. When the fund invests in these obligations, its
tax-equivalent yields will be lower. In the table above, tax-equivalent
yields are calculated assuming investments are 100% federally tax-free.
TOTAL RETURN CALCULATIONS. Total returns quoted in advertising reflect all
aspects of a class's return, including the effect of reinvesting dividends
and capital gain distributions, and any change in a class's NAV over a
stated period. Average annual total returns are calculated by determining
the growth or decline in value of a hypothetical historical investment
   in a class     over a stated period, and then calculating the annually
compounded percentage rate that would have produced the same result if the
rate of growth or decline in value had been constant over the period. For
example, a cumulative total return of 100% over ten years would produce an
average annual total return of 7.18%, which is the steady annual rate of
return that would equal 100% growth on a compounded basis in ten years.
While average annual total returns are a convenient means of comparing
investment alternatives, investors should realize that a class's
performance is not constant over time, but changes from year to year, and
that average annual total returns represent averaged figures as opposed to
the actual year-to-year performance    of a class    .
In addition to average annual total returns, a class may quote unaveraged
or cumulative total returns reflecting the simple change in value of an
investment over a stated period. Average annual and cumulative total
returns may be quoted as a percentage or as a dollar amount, and may be
calculated for a single investment, a series of investments, or a series of
redemptions, over any time period. Total returns may be broken down into
their components of income and capital (including capital gains and changes
in share price) in order to illustrate the relationship of these factors
and their contributions to total return. Total returns may be quoted on a
before-tax or after-tax basis. Total returns, yields, and other performance
information may be quoted numerically or in a table, graph, or similar
illustration.
NET ASSET VALUE. Charts and graphs using NAVs, adjusted NAVs, and benchmark
indices may be used to exhibit performance. An adjusted NAV includes any
distributions paid and reflects all elements of return. Unless otherwise
indicated, adjusted NAVs are not adjusted for sales charges, if any.
The following tables and charts show performance for each class of shares
of the fund. Class A shares have a maximum 3.50% front-end sales charge and
are also subject to a 0.25% 12b-1 fee. Class B shares have a maximum 4.00%
contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC) upon redemption and are also
subject to a    0.90% 12b-1 fee, including a     0.65%    distribution    
fee,    and     a 0.25% shareholder services fee. Institutional Class
shares do not have a sales charge or a 12b-1 fee.
HISTORICAL FUND RESULTS. The following table shows yield, tax-equivalent
yield, and total returns for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class for
the periods ended December 31, 1995. The tax-equivalent yield is based on a
36% federal income tax rate. Note that the fund may invest in securities
whose income is subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>    <C>           <C>           <C>            <C>           <C>             <C>              <C>              <C>               
                                   Average Annual Total Returns1               Cumulative Total Returns1               
 
       Thirty-Da     Tax-          One            Five          Ten             One              Five             Ten               
       y             Equivalent    Year           Years         Years           Year             Years            Years             
       Yield2        Yield2                                                                                                      
 
                                                                                                                                 
 
Municipal 
Bond -     4.42    %     6.91    %     14.02    %     7.56    %     8.34    %       14.02    %       43.94    %       122.82    %   
Class A            
 
Municipal 
Bond -     4.58    %     7.16    %     15.15    %     8.33    %     8.73    %       15.15    %       49.17    %       130.90    %   
Class B               
 
Municipal 
Bond -     4.58    %     7.16    %     18.15    %     8.33    %     8.73    %       18.15    %       49.17    %       130.90    %   
Institutional Class    
 
</TABLE>
 
1 Average annual and cumulative total returns for Class A shares include
the effect of paying Class A's maximum front-end sales charge of 3.50%.
Average annual and cumulative total returns for Class B shares include the
effect of paying Class B's applicable CDSC upon redemption based on the
following schedule: less than one year, 4%; one year to less than two
years, 3%; two years to less than three years, 3%; three years to less than
four years, 2%; four years to less than five years, 1%; and five years and
greater, 0%. Class A, Class B and Institutional Class returns prior to July
   1    , 1996, reflect the performance of the Initial Class, the original
class of the fund, which class does not have a sales charge or a 12b-1
fee.    Class A and Class B returns would have been lower had 12b-1 fees
been included.    
2 Y   ields and tax-equivalent yields shown for Class A shares include the
effect of the Class A maximum front-end sales charge, but do not include
the effect of the applicable 12b-1 fee, and would have been lower if it had
been taken into account. Yields and tax-equivalent yields shown for Class B
shares do not include the effect of the CDSC and the applicable 12b-1 fee,
and would have been lower if they had been taken into account. Yields and
tax-equivalent yields shown for Class I shares are those of Advisor
Municipal Bond Initial Class.    
The following tables show the income and capital elements of the cumulative
total return for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class of the fund. The
tables compare each class's return to the record of the Standard &
Poor's        500    Index     (S&P 500(registered trademark)), the Dow
Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), and the cost of living (measured by the
Consumer Price Index, or CPI) over the same period. The CPI information is
as of the month-end closest to the initial investment date for the fund.
The S&P 500 and DJIA comparisons are provided to show how each class's
total return compared to the record of a broad average of common stocks and
a narrower set of stocks of major industrial companies, respectively, over
the same period. Of course, since the fund invests in fixed-income
securities, common stocks represent a different type of investment from the
fund. Common stocks generally offer greater growth potential than the fund,
but generally experience greater price volatility, which means greater
potential for loss. In addition, common stocks generally provide lower
income than a fixed-income investment such as the fund. Figures for the S&P
500 and DJIA are based on the prices of unmanaged groups of stocks and,
unlike the classes' returns, do not include the effect of paying brokerage
commissions or other costs of investing.
The following charts show the growth of a hypothetical $10,000 investment
in each class of the fund, assuming all distributions were reinvested and
including the effect of the fund's Class A maximum front-end sales charge,
but not including Class A shares' or Class B shares' applicable 12b-1 fees.
Had the applicable 12b-1 fees been included, the value of an investment in
Class A shares or Class B shares would have been lower   .     This was a
period of fluctuating interest rates and bond prices and the figures below
should not be considered representative of the dividend income or capital
gain or loss that could be realized from an investment in the    class    
today.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>           <C>               <C>              <C>              <C>               <C>        <C>               <C>        
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS A                                                       INDICES               
 
Year ended    Value of          Value of         Value of         Total             S&P 500    DJIA              Cost of    
December 31   Initial           Reinvested       Reinvested       Value                                          Living     
              $10,000           Dividend         Capital Gain                                                               
              Investment        Distributions    Distributions                                                              
 
                                                                                                                            
 
                                                                                                                            
 
                                                                                                                            
 
1995          $    10,755       $    9,739       $    1,788       $    22,282       $ 40,054   $    45,581       $ 14,044   
 
1994              9,585             7,690            1,584            18,859         29,114     33,338            13,696    
 
1993              11,302            7,849            1,457            20,608         28,735     31,759            13,339    
 
1992              11,055            6,639            516              18,210         26,104     27,146            12,983    
 
1991              11,016            5,564            137              16,717         24,251     25,300            12,617    
 
1990              10,573            4,365            0                14,938         18,585     20,347            12,242    
 
1989              10,573            3,399            0                13,972         19,183     20,457            11,537    
 
1988              10,339            2,414            0                12,753         14,567     15,526            11,025    
 
1987              9,884             1,472            0                11,356         12,492     13,394            10,558    
 
1986              10,768            767              0                11,535         11,868     12,703            10,110    
 
</TABLE>
 
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on
   December 31, 1985    , the net amount invested in Class A shares was
$10,000. The cost of the initial investment ($10,000), together with the
aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions for
the period covered (their cash value at the time they were reinvested),
amounted to $   21,364    . If distributions had not been reinvested, the
amount of distributions earned from Class A over time would have been
smaller, and cash payments for the period would have amounted to
$   6,697     for dividends and $   1,046     for capital gains
distributions. Tax consequences of different investments have not been
factored into the above figures.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>             <C>               <C>               <C>                    <C>               <C>        <C>               <C>      
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - CLASS B                                                              INDICES               
 
Year ended      Value of          Value of             Value of           Total             S&P 500    DJIA              Cost of 
December 31**   Initial           Reinvested           Reinvested         Value                                          Living     
                $10,000           Dividend             Capital Gain                                                                 
                Investment        Distributions        Distributions                                                              
 
                                                                                                                                   
 
                                                                                                                                   
 
                                                                                                                                   
 
1995            $    11,146       $    10,091          $ 1,853             $    23,090       $ 40,054   $    45,581       $ 14,044 
 
1994                9,933             7,969             1,641                  19,543         29,114     33,338            13,696  
 
1993                11,712            8,134             1,510                  21,356         28,735     31,759            13,339  
 
1992                11,456            6,879             535                    18,870         26,104     27,146            12,983  
 
1991                11,415            5,766             142                    17,323         24,251     25,300            12,617  
 
1990                10,957            4,523             0                      15,480         18,585     20,347            12,242  
 
1989                10,957            3,522             0                      14,479         19,183     20,457            11,537  
 
1988                10,714            2,501             0                      13,215         14,567     15,526            11,025  
 
1987                10,243            1,524             0                      11,767         12,492     13,394            10,558  
 
1986                11,159            795               0                      11,954         11,868     12,703            10,110  
 
</TABLE>
 
   ** After a holding period of six years, Class B shares automatically
convert to Class A shares. Had the applicable class's 12b-1 fees been
reflected, the value of your investment would have been lower.    
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on
   December 31, 1985    , the net amount invested in Class B shares was
$10,000. The cost of the initial investment ($10,000), together with the
aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions for
the period covered (their cash value at the time they were reinvested),
amounted to $   21,786    . If distributions had not been reinvested, the
amount of distributions earned from Class B over time would have been
smaller, and cash payments for the period would have amounted to
$   6,940     for dividends and $   1,084     for capital gains
distributions. Tax consequences of different investments have not been
factored into the above figures.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>           <C>               <C>               <C>              <C>               <C>        <C>               <C>        
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - INSTITUTIONAL CLASS                                            INDICES               
 
Year ended    Value of          Value of          Value of         Total             S&P 500    DJIA              Cost of    
December 31   Initial           Reinvested        Reinvested       Value                                          Living     
              $10,000           Dividend          Capital Gain                                                               
              Investment        Distributions     Distributions                                                              
 
                                                                                                                             
 
                                                                                                                             
 
                                                                                                                             
 
1995          $    11,146       $    10,091       $    1,853       $    23,090       $ 40,054   $    45,581       $ 14,044   
 
1994              9,933             7,969             1,641            19,543         29,114     33,338            13,696    
 
1993              11,712            8,134             1,510            21,356         28,735     31,759            13,339    
 
1992              11,456            6,879             535              18,870         26,104     27,146            12,983    
 
1991              11,415            5,766             142              17,323         24,251     25,300            12,617    
 
1990              10,957            4,523             0                15,480         18,585     20,347            12,242    
 
1989              10,957            3,522             0                14,479         19,183     20,457            11,537    
 
1988              10,714            2,501             0                13,215         14,567     15,526            11,025    
 
1987              10,243            1,524             0                11,767         12,492     13,394            10,558    
 
1986              11,159            795               0                11,954         11,868     12,703            10,110    
 
</TABLE>
 
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on
   December 31, 1985    , the net amount invested in Institutional Class
shares was $10,000. The cost of the initial investment ($10,000), together
with the aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain
distributions for the period covered (their cash value at the time they
were reinvested), amounted to $   21,786    . If distributions had not been
reinvested, the amount of distributions earned from Institutional Class
over time would have been smaller, and cash payments for the period would
have amounted to $   6,940     for dividends and $   1,084     for capital
gains distributions. Tax consequences of different investments have not
been factored into the above figures.
PERFORMANCE COMPARISONS.    A class's p    erformance may be compared to
the performance of other mutual funds in general, or to the performance of
particular types of mutual funds. These comparisons may be expressed as
mutual fund rankings prepared by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. (Lipper),
an independent service located in Summit, New Jersey that monitors the
performance of mutual funds. Lipper generally ranks funds on the basis of
total return, assuming reinvestment of distributions, but does not take
sales charges or redemption fees into consideration, and is prepared
without regard to tax consequences. Lipper may also rank funds based on
yield. In addition to the mutual fund rankings,    a class's    
performance may be compared to stock, bond, and money market mutual fund
performance indices prepared by Lipper or other organizations. Each class
of the fund may be compared to the Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond Index, a
total return performance benchmark for the investment-grade municipal bond
market. Issues included in the Index have a minimum credit rating of Baa
and a maturity of at least one year. To be included in the Index, an issue
must have been issued after December 31, 1990 and have a total amount
outstanding of $50 million or more. Subsequent to December 31, 1995, zero
coupon bonds and issues subject to the alternative minimum tax are included
in the Index. When comparing these indices, it is important to remember the
risk and return characteristics of each type of investment. For example,
while stock mutual funds may offer higher potential returns, they also
carry the highest degree of share price volatility. Likewise, money market
funds may offer greater stability of principal, but generally do not offer
the higher potential returns available from stock mutual funds.
From time to time,    a class's     performance may also be compared to
other mutual funds tracked by financial or business publications and
periodicals. For example, the fund may quote Morningstar, Inc. in its
advertising materials. Morningstar, Inc. is a mutual fund rating service
that rates mutual funds on the basis of risk-adjusted performance. Rankings
that compare the performance of Fidelity funds to one another in
appropriate categories over specific periods of time may also be quoted in
advertising.
A class may be compared in advertising to Certificates of Deposit (CDs) or
other investments issued by banks or other depository institutions. Mutual
funds differ from bank investments in several respects. For example, the
fund may offer greater liquidity or higher potential returns than CDs, the
fund does not guarantee your principal or your return, and fund shares are
not FDIC insured.
Fidelity may provide information designed to help individuals understand
their investment goals and explore various financial strategies. Such
information may include information about current economic, market, and
political conditions; materials that describe general principles of
investing, such as asset allocation, diversification, risk tolerance, and
goal setting; questionnaires designed to help create a personal financial
profile; worksheets used to project savings needs based on assumed rates of
inflation and hypothetical rates of return; and action plans offering
investment alternatives. Materials may also include discussions of
Fidelity's asset allocation funds and other Fidelity funds, products, and
services.
Ibbotson Associates of Chicago, Illinois (Ibbotson) provides historical
returns of the capital markets in the United States, including common
stocks, small capitalization stocks, long-term corporate bonds,
intermediate-term government bonds, long-term government bonds, Treasury
bills, the U.S. rate of inflation (based on the CPI), and combinations of
various capital markets. The performance of these capital markets is based
on the returns of different indices. 
Fidelity funds may use the performance of these capital markets in order to
demonstrate general risk-versus-reward investment scenarios. Performance
comparisons may also include the value of a hypothetical investment in any
of these capital markets. The risks associated with the security types in
any capital market may or may not correspond directly to those of the
funds. Ibbotson calculates total returns in the same method as the funds.
The funds may also compare performance to that of other compilations or
indices that may be developed and made available in the future. 
A fund may compare its performance or the performance of securities in
which it may invest to averages published by IBC USA (Publications), Inc.
of Ashland, Massachusetts. These averages assume reinvestment of
distributions. The IBC/Donoghue's MONEY FUND AVERAGES(trademark)/All
Tax-Free, which is reported in the MONEY FUND REPORT(registered trademark),
covers over 395 Tax-Free money market funds. The Bond Fund Report
AverageS(trademark)/Municipal, which is reported in the BOND FUND
REPORT(registered trademark), covers over 509 bond funds. When evaluating
comparisons to money market funds, investors should consider the relevant
differences in investment objectives and policies. Specifically, money
market funds invest in short-term, high-quality instruments and seek to
maintain a stable $1.00 share price. The fund, however, invests in
longer-term instruments and its share price changes daily in response to a
variety of factors.
The fund may compare and contrast in advertising the relative advantages of
investing in a mutual fund versus an individual municipal bond. Unlike
tax-free mutual funds, individual municipal bonds offer a stated rate of
interest and, if held to maturity, repayment of principal. Although some
individual municipal bonds might offer a higher return, they do not offer
the reduced risk of a mutual fund that invests in many different
securities. The initial investment requirements and sales charges of many
tax-free mutual funds are lower than the purchase cost of individual
municipal bonds, which are generally issued in $5,000 denominations and are
subject to direct brokerage costs.
In advertising materials, Fidelity may reference or discuss its products
and services, which may include: other Fidelity funds; retirement
investing; model portfolios or allocations; and saving for college or other
goals. In addition, Fidelity may quote or reprint financial or business
publications or periodicals as they relate to current economic and
political conditions, fund management, portfolio composition, investment
philosophy, investment techniques, the desirability of owning a particular
mutual fund, and Fidelity services and products.
   The     fund may be advertised as part of certain asset allocation
programs involving other Fidelity or non-Fidelity mutual funds. These asset
allocation programs may advertise a model portfolio and its performance
results.
   The     fund may be advertised as part of a no transaction fee (NTF)
program in which Fidelity and non-Fidelity mutual funds are offered. An NTF
program may advertise performance results.
The fund may present its fund number, Quotron(trademark) number, and CUSIP
number, and discuss or quote its current portfolio manager.
VOLATILITY.    The fund     may quote various measures of volatility and
benchmark correlation in advertising. In addition, the fund may compare
these measures to those of other funds. Measures of volatility seek to
compare a class's historical share price fluctuations or total returns to
those of a benchmark. Measures of benchmark correlation indicate how valid
a comparative benchmark may be. All measures of volatility and correlation
are calculated using averages of historical data. In advertising, the fund
may also discuss or illustrate examples of interest rate sensitivity.
MOMENTUM INDICATORS indicate a class's price movements over specific
periods of time. Each point on the momentum indicator represents a class's
percentage change in price movements over that period.
   The fund may advertise e    xamples of the effects of periodic
investment plans, including the principle of dollar cost averaging   .    
In such a program, an investor invests a fixed dollar amount in a class at
periodic intervals, thereby purchasing fewer shares when prices are high
and more shares when prices are low. While such a strategy does not assure
a profit or guard against loss in a declining market, the investor's
average cost per share can be lower than if fixed numbers of shares are
purchased at the same intervals. In evaluating such a plan, investors
should consider their    willingness     to continue purchasing shares
during periods of low price levels.
As of    April 30, 1996,     FMR advised over $2   5    .5 billion in
tax-free fund assets, $8   2     billion in money market fund assets,
$2   71     billion in equity fund assets, $   53     billion in
international fund assets, and $23 billion in Spartan fund assets. The fund
may reference the growth and variety of money market mutual funds and the
adviser's innovation and participation in the industry. The equity funds
under management figure represents the largest amount of equity fund assets
under management by a mutual fund investment adviser in the United States,
making FMR America's leading equity (stock) fund manager. FMR, its
subsidiaries, and affiliates maintain a worldwide information and
communications network for the purpose of researching and managing
investments abroad.
In addition to performance rankings, the fund may compare each class's
total expense ratio to the average total expense ratio of similar funds
tracked by Lipper. A class's total expense ratio is a significant factor in
comparing bond and money market investments because of its effect on yield. 
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE, EXCHANGE, AND REDEMPTION INFORMATION
   The fund is open for business and the NAV of each class is calculated
each day the NYSE is open for trading. The NYSE has designated the
following holiday closings for 1996: New Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good
Friday, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and
Christmas Day. Although FMR expects the same holiday schedule to be
observed in the future, the NYSE may modify its holiday schedule at any
time. In addition, the fund will not process wire purchases and redemptions
on days when the Federal Reserve Wire System is closed.    
CLASS A SHARES ONLY
Pursuant to Rule 22d-1 under the 1940 Act, FDC exercises its right to waive
Class A's maximum 3.50% front-end sales charge in connection with the
fund's merger with or acquisition of any investment company or trust. In
addition, FDC has chosen to waive Class A's front-end sales charge in
certain instances because of efficiencies involved in those sales of
shares. The sales charge will not apply:
1. to shares purchased by a bank trust officer, registered representative,
or other employee (and their immediate families) of investment
professionals under special arrangements in connection with FDC's sales
activities;
2. to shares purchased by a current or former Trustee or officer of a
Fidelity fund or a current or retired officer, director, or regular
employee of FMR Corp. or its direct or indirect subsidiaries (a Fidelity
Trustee or employee), the spouse of a Fidelity Trustee or employee, a
Fidelity Trustee or employee acting as custodian for a minor child, or a
person acting as trustee of a trust for the sole benefit of the minor child
of a Fidelity Trustee or employee;
3. to shares purchased by a charitable organization (as defined in Section
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code) investing $100,000 or more;
4. to shares purchased for a charitable remainder trust or life income pool
established for the benefit of a charitable organization (as defined by
Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code);
5. to shares in a Fidelity IRA or Fidelity Advisor IRA account purchased
(including purchases by exchange) with the proceeds of a distribution from
an employee benefit plan having more than 200 eligible employees or a
minimum of $3,000,000 in plan assets invested in Fidelity mutual funds or
$1,000,000 invested in Fidelity Advisor mutual funds;
6. to shares purchased by an insurance company separate account used to
fund annuity contracts purchased by employee benefit plans (including
403(b) programs, but otherwise as defined in ERISA)), which, in the
aggregate, have either more than 200 eligible employees or a minimum of
$1,000,000 in assets invested in Fidelity Advisor funds; 
7. to shares purchased by any state, county, city, or government
instrumentality, department or authority or agency;
8. to shares purchased with redemption proceeds from other mutual fund
complexes on which the investor has paid a front-end or contingent deferred
sales charge;
9. to shares purchased by a trust institution or bank trust department,
excluding assets described in (11) and (12) below, that has executed a
Participation Agreement with FDC specifying certain asset minimums and
qualifications, and marketing program restrictions. Assets managed by third
parties do not qualify for this waiver;
10. to shares purchased for use in a broker-dealer managed account program,
provided the broker-dealer has executed a participation agreement with FDC
specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing,
program and trading restrictions. Employee benefit plan assets do not
qualify for this waiver;
11. to shares purchased as part of an employee benefit plan having more
than (i) 200 eligible employees or a minimum of $1,000,000 in plan assets
invested in the Fidelity Advisor funds, or (ii) 25 eligible employees or
$250,000 in plan assets invested in Fidelity Advisor funds that subscribes
to Fidelity Advisor Retirement Connection or similar program sponsored by
Fidelity Investments Institutional Services Company, Inc.;
12. to shares purchased as part of an employee benefit plan through an
intermediary that has executed a Participation Agreement with FDC
specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing,
program and trading restrictions;
13. to shares purchased on a discretionary basis by a registered investment
adviser which is not part of an organization primarily engaged in the
brokerage business, that has executed a Participation Agreement with FDC
specifying certain asset minimums and qualifications, and marketing,
program and trading restrictions. Employee benefit plan assets do not
qualify for this waiver; or
14. to shares purchased with distributions of income, principal, and
capital gains from Fidelity Defined Trusts.
In order to qualify for waivers (9), (10) and (13), eligible investors with
existing Class A accounts will be required to sign and comply with a
Participation Agreement. Eligible investors that do not meet revised asset
requirements specified in the Participation Agreement will be allowed to
continue investing in Class A shares under the terms of their current
relationship until June 30, 1997, after which they will be prevented from
making new or subsequent purchases in Class A load waived, except that
employee benefit plans will be permitted to make additional purchases of
Class A shares load waived.
A sales load waiver form must accompany these transactions.
   For the purposes of qualifying for waiver (11), employee benefit plans
subscribing to the Premiere Retirement Savings Plan Program offered by
National Financial Correspondent Services may be aggregated.    
FINDERS FEE. On eligible purchases of Class A shares in amounts of $1
million or more, investment professionals will be compensated with a fee of
0.25%. Eligible purchases are the following purchases made through
broker-dealers and banks (excluding trust departments): an individual trade
of $1 million or more; a trade which brings the value of the accumulated
account(s) of an investor (including an employee benefit plan) past $1
million; a trade for an investor with an accumulated account value of $1
million or more; and an incremental trade toward an investor's $1 million
"Letter of Intent." 
Any assets in relation to which an investment professional has received
such compensation will bear a Class A CDSC if they do not remain in Class A
shares of the Fidelity Advisor funds, Initial Class shares of Daily Money
Fund: U.S. Treasury Portfolio or Daily Money Fund: Money Market Portfolio,
or shares of Daily Tax-Exempt Money Fund, for a period of at least one
uninterrupted year. The Class A CDSC will be 0.25% of the lesser of the
cost of the shares at the initial date of purchase or the value of the
shares at redemption, not including any reinvested dividends or capital
gains. Class A CDSC shares representing reinvested dividends or capital
gains, if any, will be redeemed first, followed by other Class A CDSC
shares that have been held for the longest period of time.
With respect to employee benefit plans, the Class A CDSC does not apply to
the following types of redemptions: (i) plan loans or distributions or (ii)
exchanges to non-Advisor fund investment options. With respect to
Individual Retirement Accounts, the Class A CDSC does not apply to
redemptions made for disability, payment of death benefits, or required
partial distributions starting at age 70 1/2.
CLASS B SHARES ONLY
The        CDSC        on Class B shares may be waived in the case of (1)
disability or death, provided that the redemption is made within one year
following the death or initial determination of disability; or (2) in
connection with a total or partial redemption made in connection with
distributions from retirement plan accounts at age 70 1/2, which are
permitted without penalty pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code.
A sales load waiver form must accompany these transactions.
CLASS A AND CLASS B SHARES ONLY
QUANTITY DISCOUNTS. To obtain a reduction of the front-end sales charge on
Class A shares, you or your investment professional must notify the
transfer agent at the time of purchase whenever a quantity discount is
applicable to your purchase. Upon such notification, you will receive the
lowest applicable front-end sales charge.
For purposes of qualifying for a reduction in front-end sales charges under
the Combined Purchase, Rights of Accumulation, or Letter of Intent
programs, the following may qualify as an individual or a "company" as
defined in Section 2(a)(8) of the 1940 Act: an individual, spouse, and
their children under age 21 purchasing for his, her, or their own account;
a trustee, administrator or other fiduciary purchasing for a single trust
estate or a single fiduciary account or for a single or a parent-subsidiary
group of "employee benefits plans" (as defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA);
and tax-exempt organizations as defined under Section 501(c)(3) of the
Internal Revenue Code.
RIGHTS OF ACCUMULATION permit reduced front-end sales charges on any future
purchases of Class A shares after you have reached a new breakpoint in the
fund's sales charge schedule. The value of currently held Fidelity Advisor
fund Class A and Class B shares, Initial Class shares and Class B shares of
Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury Portfolio, Initial Class shares of Daily
Money Fund: Money Market Portfolio, and shares of Daily Tax-Exempt Money
Fund acquired by exchange from any Fidelity Advisor fund, is determined at
the current day's NAV at the close of business, and is added to the amount
of your new purchase valued at the current offering price to determine your
reduced front-end sales charge.
LETTER OF INTENT. You may obtain Class A shares at the same reduced
front-end sales charge by filing a non-binding Letter of Intent (the
Letter) within 90 days of the start of Class A purchases. Each Class A
investment you make after signing the Letter will be entitled to the
front-end sales charge applicable to the total investment indicated in the
Letter. For example, a $2,500 purchase of Class A shares toward a $50,000
Letter would receive the same reduced sales charge as if the $50,000   
    had been invested at one time. To ensure that you receive a reduced
front-end sales charge on future purchases, you or your investment
professional must inform the transfer agent that the Letter is in effect
each time Class A shares are purchased. Reinvested income and capital gain
distributions do not count toward the completion of the Letter.
Your initial investment must be at least 5% of the total amount you plan to
invest. Out of the initial purchase, 5% of the dollar amount specified in
the Letter will be registered in your name and held in escrow. The Class A
shares held in escrow cannot be redeemed or exchanged until the Letter is
satisfied or the additional sales charges have been paid. You will earn
income dividends and capital gain distributions on escrowed Class A shares.
The escrow will be released when your purchase of the total amount has been
completed. You are not obligated to complete the Letter.
If you purchase more than the amount specified in the Letter and qualify
for a future front-end sales charge reduction, the front-end sales charge
will be adjusted to reflect your total purchase at the end of 13 months.
Surplus funds will be applied to the purchase of additional Class A shares
at the then-current offering price applicable to the total purchase.
If you do not complete your purchase under the Letter within the 13-month
period, 30 days' written notice will be provided for you to pay the
increased front-end sales charges due. Otherwise, sufficient escrowed Class
A shares will be redeemed to pay such charges.
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PROGRAM. You can make regular
investments in Class A or Class B shares of the fund with the Systematic
Investment Program by completing the appropriate section of the account
application and attaching a voided personal check with your bank's magnetic
ink coding number across the front. If your bank account is jointly owned,
be sure that all owners sign.
Your account will be drafted on or about the first business day of every
month. You may cancel your participation in the Systematic Investment
Program at any time without payment of a cancellation fee. You will receive
a confirmation from the transfer agent for every transaction, and a debit
entry will appear on your bank statement.
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PROGRAM. If you own Class A shares
worth $10,000 or more, you can have monthly, quarterly or semiannual checks
sent from your account to you, to a person named by you, or to your bank
checking account. Your Systematic Withdrawal Program payments are drawn
from Class A share redemptions. If Systematic Withdrawal P   rogram    
redemptions exceed income dividends earned on your shares, your account
eventually may be exhausted. 
CLASS A, CLASS B, AND INSTITUTIONAL CLASS SHARES
The fund is open for business and the NAV and, where applicable, the
offering price, for each class is calculated each day the NYSE is open for
trading. The NYSE has designated the following holiday closings for 1996:
New Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday, Memorial Day, Independence
Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. Although FMR expects
the same holiday schedule to be observed in the future, the NYSE may modify
its holiday schedule at any time. In addition, the fund will not process
wire purchases and redemptions on days when the Federal Reserve Wire System
is closed.
FSC normally determines each class's NAV as of the close of the NYSE
(normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). However, NAV may be calculated earlier
if trading on the NYSE is restricted or as permitted by the SEC. To the
extent that portfolio securities are traded in other markets on days when
the NYSE is closed, a class's NAV may be affected on days when investors do
not have access to the fund to purchase or redeem shares. In addition,
trading in some of the fund's portfolio securities may not occur on days
when the fund is open for business.
If the Trustees determine that existing conditions make cash payments
undesirable, redemption payments may be made in whole or in part in
securities or other property, valued for this purpose as they are valued in
computing each class's NAV. Shareholders receiving securities or other
property on redemption may realize a gain or loss for tax purposes, and
will incur any costs of sale, as well as the associated inconveniences.
Pursuant to Rule 11a-3 under the 1940 Act, the fund is required to give
shareholders at least 60 days' notice prior to terminating or modifying its
exchange privilege. Under the Rule, the 60-day notification requirement may
be waived if (i) the only effect of a modification would be to reduce or
eliminate an administrative fee, redemption fee, or deferred sales charge
ordinarily payable at the time of an exchange, or (ii) the fund suspends
the redemption of the shares to be exchanged as permitted under the 1940
Act or the rules and regulations thereunder, or the fund to be acquired
suspends the sale of its shares because it is unable to invest amounts
effectively in accordance with its investment objective and policies.
In the Prospectus, the fund has notified shareholders that it reserves the
right at any time, without prior notice, to refuse exchange purchases by
any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be unable to
invest effectively in accordance with its investment objective and
policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely affected.
DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
DISTRIBUTIONS. If you request to have distributions mailed to you and the
U.S. Postal Service cannot deliver your checks, or if your checks remain
uncashed for six months, Fidelity may reinvest your distributions at the
then-current NAV. All subsequent distributions will then be reinvested
until you provide Fidelity with alternate instructions.
DIVIDENDS. To the extent that the fund's income is designated as federally
tax-exempt interest, the daily dividends declared by the fund are also
federally tax-exempt. Short-term capital gains are distributed as dividend
income, but do not qualify for the dividends-received deduction. These
gains will be taxed as ordinary income. The fund will send each shareholder
a notice in January describing the tax status of dividend and capital gain
distributions (if any) for the prior year. 
Shareholders are required to report tax-exempt income on their federal tax
returns. Shareholders who earn other income, such as Social Security
benefits, may be subject to federal income tax on up to 85% of such
benefits to the extent that their income, including tax-exempt income,
exceeds certain base amounts.
The fund purchases municipal securities    whose interest FMR believes is
free from federal income tax    . Generally   ,     issuers or other
parties    have entered into covenants requiring continuous compliance with
    federal tax requirements    to preserve the tax-free status of interest
payments over the life of the security    . If at any time the covenants
are not complied with,    or if the IRS otherwise determines that the
issuer did not comply with the relevant tax requirements,     interest
   payments from     a security could become federally taxable retroactive
to the date the security was issued. For certain types of structure   d    
securities,    the tax status of the pass-through of tax-free income may
also be based on the federal tax treatment of the structure.    
As a result of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, interest on certain "private
activity" securities is subject to the federal alternative minimum tax
(AMT), although the interest continues to be excludable from gross income
for other tax purposes. Interest from private activity securities will be
considered tax-exempt for purposes of the fund's policies of investing   
    at least 80% of its assets are invested in municipal securities whose
interest is free from federal income tax. Interest from private activity
securities is a tax preference item for the purposes of determining whether
a taxpayer is subject to the AMT and the amount of AMT to be paid, if any.
Private activity securities issued after August 7, 1986 to benefit a
private or industrial user or to finance a private facility are affected by
this rule. 
A portion of the gain on bonds purchased with market discount after April
30, 1993 and short-term capital gains distributed by the fund are taxable
to shareholders as dividends, not as capital gains.
Corporate investors should note that a tax preference item for purposes of
the corporate AMT is 75% of the amount by which adjusted current earnings
(which includes tax-exempt interest) exceeds the alternative minimum
taxable income of the corporation. If a shareholder receives an
exempt-interest dividend and sells shares at a loss after holding them for
a period of six months or less, the loss will be disallowed to the extent
of the amount of the exempt-interest dividend. 
CAPITAL GAIN DISTRIBUTIONS. Long-term capital gains earned by the fund on
the sale of securities and distributed to shareholders are federally
taxable as long-term capital gains, regardless of the length of time
shareholders have held their shares. If a shareholder receives a long-term
capital gain distribution on shares of the fund, and such shares are held
six months or less and are sold at a loss, the portion of the loss equal to
the amount of the long-term capital gain distribution will be considered a
long-term loss for tax purposes. Short-term capital gains distributed by
the fund are taxable to shareholders as dividends, not as capital gains. 
As of December 31, 1995, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $27,853,000. This loss carryforward will expire on December
31, 2003 and is available to offset future capital gains.
TAX STATUS OF THE FUND. The fund intends to qualify each year as a
"regulated investment company" for tax purposes so that it will not be
liable for federal tax on income and capital gains distributed to
shareholders. In order to qualify as a regulated investment company and
avoid being subject to federal income or excise taxes at the fund level,
the fund intends to distribute substantially all of its net investment
income and net realized capital gains within each calendar year as well as
on a fiscal year basis. The fund intends to comply with other tax rules
applicable to regulated investment companies, including a requirement that
capital gains from the sale of securities held less than three months
constitute less than 30% of the fund's gross income for each fiscal year.
Gains from some futures contracts and options are included in this 30%
calculation, which may limit the fund's investments in such instruments.
The fund is treated as a separate entity from the other funds of Fidelity
Municipal Trust for tax purposes.
OTHER TAX INFORMATION. The information above is only a summary of some of
the tax consequences generally affecting the fund and its shareholders, and
no attempt has been made to discuss individual tax consequences. In
addition to federal income taxes, shareholders may be subject to state and
local taxes on fund distributions, and shares may be subject to state and
local personal property taxes. Investors should consult their tax advisers
to determine whether the fund is suitable to their particular tax
situation.
FMR
All of the stock of FMR is owned by FMR Corp., its parent organized in
1972. The voting common stock of FMR Corp. is divided into two classes.
Class B is held predominantly by members of the Edward C. Johnson 3d family
and is entitled to 49% of the vote on any matter acted upon by the voting
common stock. Class A is held predominantly by non-Johnson family member
employees of FMR Corp. and its affiliates and is entitled to 51% of the
vote on any such matter. The Johnson family group and all other Class B
shareholders have entered into a shareholders' voting agreement under which
all Class B shares will be voted in accordance with the majority vote of
Class B shares. Under        the 1940 Act, control of a company is presumed
where one individual or group of individuals owns more than 25% of the
voting stock of that company. Therefore, through their ownership of voting
common stock and the execution of the shareholders' voting agreement,
members of the Johnson family may be deemed, under the 1940 Act, to form a
controlling group with respect to FMR Corp.
At present, the principal operating activities of FMR Corp. are those
conducted by three of its divisions as follows: FSC, which is the transfer
and shareholder servicing agent for certain of the funds advised by FMR;
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, which performs
shareholder servicing functions for institutional customers and funds sold
through intermediaries; and Fidelity Investments Retail Marketing Company,
which provides marketing services to various companies within the Fidelity
organization.
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that sets forth all employees'
fiduciary responsibilities regarding the funds, establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions. For example, all
personal trades in most securities require pre-clearance, and participation
in initial public offerings is prohibited. In addition, restrictions on the
timing of personal investing in relation to trades by Fidelity funds and on
short-term trading have been adopted.
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
The Trustees   , Members of the Advisory Board,     and executive officers
of the trust are listed below. Except as indicated, each individual has
held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the last
five years. All persons named as Trustees    and Members of the Advisory
Board     also serve in similar capacities for other funds advised by FMR.
The business address of each Trustee and officer who is an "interested
person" (as defined in the    1940     Act) is 82 Devonshire Street,
Boston, Massachusetts 02109, which is also the address of FMR. The business
address of all the other Trustees    and Members of the Advisory Board    
is Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 9235, Boston, Massachusetts 02205-9235.
Those Trustees who are "interested persons" by virtue of their affiliation
with either the trust or FMR are indicated by an asterisk (*).
*EDWARD C. JOHNSON 3d (66), Trustee and President, is Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and a Director of FMR Corp.; a Director and Chairman of
the Board and of the Executive Committee of FMR; Chairman and a Director of
FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity
Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
*J. GARY BURKHEAD (55), Trustee and Senior Vice President, is President of
FMR; and President and a Director of FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity Management &
Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
RALPH F. COX (64), Trustee (1991), is a consultant to Western Mining
Corporation (1994). Prior to February 1994, he was President of Greenhill
Petroleum Corporation (petroleum exploration and production). Until March
1990, Mr. Cox was President and Chief Operating Officer of Union Pacific
Resources Company (exploration and production). He is a Director of
Sanifill Corporation (non-hazardous waste, 1993) and CH2M Hill Companies
(engineering). In addition, he serves on the Board of Directors of the
Texas State Chamber of Commerce, and he is a member of advisory boards of
Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin.
PHYLLIS BURKE DAVIS (64), Trustee (1992). Prior to her retirement in
September 1991, Mrs. Davis was the Senior Vice President of Corporate
Affairs of Avon Products, Inc. She is currently a Director of BellSouth
Corporation (telecommunications), Eaton Corporation (manufacturing, 1991),
and the TJX Companies, Inc. (retail stores), and previously served as a
Director of Hallmark Cards, Inc. (1985-1991) and Nabisco Brands, Inc. In
addition, she is a member of the President's Advisory Council of The
University of Vermont School of Business Administration.
RICHARD J. FLYNN (72), Trustee and Chairman of the non-interested Trustees,
is a financial consultant. Prior to September 1986, Mr. Flynn was Vice
Chairman and a Director of the Norton Company (manufacturer of industrial
devices). He is currently a Trustee of College of the Holy Cross and Old
Sturbridge Village, Inc., and he previously served as a Director of
Mechanics Bank (1971-1995).
E. BRADLEY JONES (68), Trustee. Prior to his retirement in 1984, Mr. Jones
was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of LTV Steel Company. He is a
Director of TRW Inc. (original equipment and replacement products),
Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (mining), Consolidated Rail Corporation, Birmingham
Steel Corporation, and RPM, Inc. (manufacturer of chemical products), and
he previously served as a Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (mining and
marketing, 1985-1995) and Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc. (1985-1995).
In addition, he serves as a Trustee of First Union Real Estate Investments,
a Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of the Cleveland Clinic
Foundation, a Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of University
School (Cleveland), and a Trustee of Cleveland Clinic Florida.
DONALD J. KIRK (63), Trustee, is Executive-in-Residence (1995) at Columbia
University Graduate School of Business and a financial consultant. From
1987 to January 1995, Mr. Kirk was a Professor at Columbia University
Graduate School of Business. Prior to 1987, he was Chairman of the
Financial Accounting Standards Board. Mr. Kirk is a Director of General Re
Corporation (reinsurance), and he previously served as a Director of
Valuation Research Corp. (appraisals and valuations, 1993-1995). In
addition, he serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National
Arts Stabilization Fund, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the
Greenwich Hospital Association, a Member of the Public Oversight Board of
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants' SEC Practice
Section (1995), and as a Public Governor of the National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. (1996).
*PETER S. LYNCH (53), Trustee, is Vice Chairman and Director of FMR (1992).
Prior to May 31, 1990, he was a Director of FMR and Executive Vice
President of FMR (a position he held until March 31, 1991); Vice President
of Fidelity Magellan Fund and FMR Growth Group Leader; and Managing
Director of FMR Corp. Mr. Lynch was also Vice President of Fidelity
Investments Corporate Services (1991-1992). He is a Director of W.R. Grace
& Co. (chemicals) and Morrison Knudsen Corporation (engineering and
construction). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College,
Massachusetts Eye & Ear Infirmary, Historic Deerfield (1989) and Society
for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, and as an Overseer of the
Museum of Fine Arts of Boston.
GERALD C. McDONOUGH (67), Trustee and Vice-Chairman of the non-interested
Trustees, is Chairman of G.M. Management Group (strategic advisory
services). Prior to his retirement in July 1988, he was Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of Leaseway Transportation Corp. (physical distribution
services). Mr. McDonough is a Director of ACME-Cleveland Corp. (metal
working, telecommunications and electronic products), Brush-Wellman Inc.
(metal refining), York International Corp. (air conditioning and
refrigeration), Commercial Intertech Corp. (water treatment equipment,
1992), and Associated Estates Realty Corporation (a real estate investment
trust, 1993).
EDWARD H. MALONE (71), Trustee. Prior to his retirement in 1985, Mr. Malone
was Chairman, General Electric Investment Corporation and a Vice President
of General Electric Company. He is a Director of Allegheny Power Systems,
Inc. (electric utility), General Re Corporation (reinsurance) and Mattel
Inc. (toy manufacturer). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of the Naples
Philharmonic Center for the Arts and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and
he is a member of the Advisory Boards of Butler Capital Corporation Funds
and Warburg, Pincus Partnership Funds.
MARVIN L. MANN (63), Trustee (1993), is Chairman of the Board, President,
and Chief Executive Officer of Lexmark International, Inc. (office
machines, 1991). Prior to 1991, he held the positions of Vice President of
International Business Machines Corporation ("IBM") and President and
General Manager of various IBM divisions and subsidiaries. Mr. Mann is a
Director of M.A. Hanna Company (chemicals, 1993) and Infomart (marketing
services, 1991), a Trammell Crow Co. In addition, he serves as the Campaign
Vice Chairman of the Tri-State United Way (1993) and is a member of the
University of Alabama President's Cabinet.
THOMAS R. WILLIAMS (67), Trustee, is President of The Wales Group, Inc.
(management and financial advisory services). Prior to retiring in 1987,
Mr. Williams served as Chairman of the Board of First Wachovia Corporation
(bank holding company), and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The
First National Bank of Atlanta and First Atlanta Corporation (bank holding
company). He is currently a Director of BellSouth Corporation
(telecommunications), ConAgra, Inc. (agricultural products), Fisher
Business Systems, Inc. (computer software), Georgia Power Company (electric
utility), Gerber Alley & Associates, Inc. (computer software), National
Life Insurance Company of Vermont, American Software, Inc., and AppleSouth,
Inc. (restaurants, 1992).
   WILLIAM O. MCCOY (62), Member of the Advisory Board (1996), is the Vice
President of Finance for the University of North Carolina (16-school
system, 1995). Prior to his retirement in December 1994, Mr. McCoy was Vice
Chairman of the Board of BellSouth Corporation (telecommunications) and
President of BellSouth Enterprises. He is currently a Director of Liberty
Corporation (holding company), Weeks Corporation of Atlanta (real estate,
1994), and Carolina Power and Light Company (electric utility, 1996).
Previously, he was a Director of First American Corporation (bank holding
company, 1979-1996). In addition, Mr. McCoy serves as a member of the Board
of Visitors for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1994) and
for the Kenan Flager Business School (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill).    
FRED L. HENNING, JR. (57), Vice President, is Vice President of Fidelity's
money market (1994) and fixed-income (1995) funds and Senior Vice President
of FMR Texas Inc.
ARTHUR S. LORING (48), Secretary, is Senior Vice President (1993) and
General Counsel of FMR, Vice President-Legal of FMR Corp., and Vice
President and Clerk of FDC.
KENNETH A. RATHGEBER (49), Treasurer (1995), is Treasurer of the Fidelity
funds and is an employee of FMR (1995). Before joining FMR, Mr. Rathgeber
was a Vice President of Goldman Sachs & Co. (1978-1995), where he served in
various positions, including Vice President of Proprietary Accounting
(1988-1992), Global Co-Controller (1992-1994), and Chief Operations Officer
of Goldman Sachs (Asia) LLC (1994-1995).
JOHN H. COSTELLO (49), Assistant Treasurer, is an employee of FMR.
LEONARD M. RUSH (50), Assistant Treasurer (1994), is an employee of FMR
(1994). Prior to becoming Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds, Mr.
Rush was Chief Compliance Officer of FMR Corp. (1993-1994) and Chief
Financial Officer of Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. (1990-1993).
The following table sets forth information describing the compensation of
each current Trustee of the fund for his or her services as trustee for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 1995.
      COMPENSATION TABLE               
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                       <C>             <C>                  <C>                 <C>             
Trustees                  Aggregate       Pension or           Estimated Annual    Total           
                          Compensation    Retirement           Benefits Upon       Compensation    
                          from            Benefits Accrued     Retirement from     from the Fund   
                          the Fund        as Part of Fund      the Fund            Complex*        
                                          Expenses from the    Complex*                            
                                          Fund Complex*                                            
 
J. Gary Burkhead **       $ 0             $ 0                  $ 0                 $ 0             
 
Ralph F. Cox               439             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Phyllis Burke Davis        429             5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
Richard J. Flynn           549             0                    52,000              160,500        
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d **    0               0                    0                   0              
 
E. Bradley Jones           439             5,200                49,400              128,000        
 
Donald J. Kirk             451             5,200                52,000              129,500        
 
Peter S. Lynch **          0               0                    0                   0              
 
Gerald C. McDonough        440             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Edward H. Malone           439             5,200                44,200              128,000        
 
Marvin L. Mann             439             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Thomas R. Williams         429             5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
</TABLE>
 
* Information is as of December 31, 1995 for 219 funds in the complex.
** Interested trustees of the fund are compensated by FMR.
The non-interested Trustees may elect to defer receipt of all or a
percentage of their annual fees in accordance with the terms of a Deferred
Compensation Plan (the "Plan"). Under the Plan, compensation deferred by a
Trustee is periodically adjusted as though an equivalent amount had been
invested and reinvested in shares of one or more funds in the complex
designated by such Trustee (designated securities). The amount paid to the
Trustee under the Plan will be determined based upon the performance of
such investments. Deferral of Trustees' fees in accordance with the Plan
will have a negligible effect on the fund's assets, liabilities, and net
income per share, and will not obligate the fund to retain the services of
any Trustee or to pay any particular level of compensation to the Trustee.
The fund may invest in such designated securities without shareholder
approval.
Under a retirement program adopted in July 1988, the non-interested
Trustees, upon reaching age 72, become eligible to participate in a
retirement program under which they receive payments during their lifetime
from a fund based on their basic trustee fees and length of service. The
obligation of a fund to make such payments is not secured or funded.
Trustees become eligible if, at the time of retirement, they have served on
the Board for at least five years. Currently, Messrs. Ralph S. Saul,
William R. Spaulding, Bertram H. Witham, and David L. Yunich, all former
non-interested Trustees, receive retirement benefits under the program.
On    May 31, 1996,     the Trustees and officers of the fund owned, in the
aggregate, less than 1% of the fund's total outstanding shares.
MANAGEMENT CONTRACT
The fund employs FMR to furnish investment advisory and other services.
Under its management contract with the fund, FMR acts as investment adviser
and, subject to the supervision of the Board of Trustees, directs the
investments of the fund in accordance with its investment objective,
policies, and limitations. FMR also provides the fund with all necessary
office facilities and personnel for servicing the fund's investments,
compensates all officers of the fund and all Trustees who are "interested
persons" of the trust or of FMR, and all personnel of the fund or FMR
performing services relating to research, statistical, and investment
activities.
In addition, FMR or its affiliates, subject to the supervision of the Board
of Trustees, provide the management and administrative services necessary
for the operation of the fund. These services include providing facilities
for maintaining the fund's organization; supervising relations with
custodians, transfer and pricing agents, accountants, underwriters, and
other persons dealing with the fund; preparing all general shareholder
communications and conducting shareholder relations; maintaining the fund's
records and the registration of the fund's shares under federal and state
laws; developing management and shareholder services for the fund; and
furnishing reports, evaluations, and analyses on a variety of subjects to
the Trustees.
In addition to the management fee payable to FMR and the fees payable to
UMB, the fund pays all of its expenses, without limitation, that are not
assumed by those parties. The fund pays for the typesetting, printing, and
mailing of its proxy materials to shareholders, legal expenses, and the
fees of the custodian, auditor and non-interested Trustees. Although the
fund's current management contract provides that the fund will pay for
typesetting, printing, and mailing prospectuses, statements of additional
information, notices, and reports to shareholders, the trust, on behalf of
the fund, has entered into a revised transfer agent agreement with UMB,
pursuant to which UMB bears the costs of providing these services to
existing shareholders. Other expenses paid by the fund include interest,
taxes, brokerage commissions, and the fund's proportionate share of
insurance premiums and Investment Company Institute dues. The fund is also
liable for such non-recurring expenses as may arise, including costs of any
litigation to which the fund may be a party, and any obligation it may have
to indemnify its officers and Trustees with respect to litigation.
FMR is the fund's manager pursuant to a management contract dated January
1, 1994, which was approved by shareholders on December 15, 1993.
For the services of FMR under the contract, the fund pays FMR a monthly
management fee composed of the sum of two elements: a group fee rate and an
individual fund fee rate.
The group fee rate is based on the monthly average net assets of all of the
registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts and
is calculated on a cumulative basis pursuant to the graduated fee rate
schedule shown below on the left. The schedule below on the right shows the
effective annual group fee rate at various asset levels, which is the
result of cumulatively applying the annualized rates on the left. For
example, the effective annual fee rate at $366.9 billion of group net
assets - the approximate level for Decembe   r     1995 - was .1482%, which
is the weighted average of the respective fee rates for each level of group
net assets up to $366.9 billion.
GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE   EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
Average Group     Annualized   Group Net        Effective Annual   
Assets            Rate         Assets           Fee Rate           
 
 0 - $3 billion   .3700%        $ 0.5 billion   .3700%             
 
 3 - 6            .3400          25             .2664              
 
 6 - 9            .3100          50             .2188              
 
 9 - 12           .2800          75             .1986              
 
 12 - 15          .2500          100            .1869              
 
 15 - 18          .2200          125            .1793              
 
 18 - 21          .2000          150            .1736              
 
 21 - 24          .1900          175            .1695              
 
 24 - 30          .1800          200            .1658              
 
 30 - 36          .1750          225            .1629              
 
 36 - 42          .1700          250            .1604              
 
 42 - 48          .1650          275            .1583              
 
 48 - 66          .1600          300            .1565              
 
 66 - 84          .1550          325            .1548              
 
 84 - 120         .1500          350            .1533              
 
 120 - 174        .1450          400            .1507              
 
 174 - 228        .1400                                            
 
 228 - 282        .1375                                            
 
 282 - 336        .1350                                            
 
 Over 336         .1325                                            
 
Prior to January 1, 1994, the group fee rate was based on a schedule with
breakpoints ending at .1400% for average group assets in excess of $174
billion. The group fee rate breakpoints shown above for average group
assets in excess of $120 billion and under $228 billion were voluntarily
adopted by FMR on January 1, 1992. The additional breakpoints shown above
for average group assets in excess of $228 billion were voluntarily adopted
by FMR on November 1, 1993. The fund's current management contract reflects
these extensions of the group fee rate schedule.
On August 1, 1994, FMR voluntarily revised the prior extensions to the
group fee rate schedule, and added new breakpoints for average group assets
in excess of $156 billion and under $372 billion as shown in the schedule
below. The revised group fee rate schedule was identical to the above
schedule for average group assets under $156 billion.
On January 1, 1996, FMR voluntarily added new breakpoints to the revised
schedule for average group assets in excess of $372 billion, pending
shareholder approval of a new management contract reflecting the revised
schedule and additional breakpoints. The revised group fee rate schedule
and the extensions provide for lower management fee rates as FMR's assets
under management increase. For average group assets in excess of $156
billion, the revised group fee rate schedule with additional breakpoints
voluntarily adopted by FMR is as follows:
GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE   EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
Average Group         Annualized   Group Net        Effective Annual   
Assets                Rate         Assets           Fee Rate           
 
 120 - $156 billion   .1450%        $ 150 billion   .1736%             
 
 156 - 192            .1400          175            .1690              
 
 192 - 228            .1350          200            .1652              
 
 228 - 264            .1300          225            .1618              
 
 264 - 300            .1275          250            .1587              
 
 300 - 336            .1250          275            .1560              
 
 336 - 372            .1225          300            .1536              
 
 372 - 408            .1200          325            .1514              
 
 408 - 444            .1175          350            .1494              
 
 444 - 480            .1150          375            .1476              
 
 480 - 516            .1125          400            .1459              
 
 Over 516             .1100          425            .1443              
 
                                     450            .1427              
 
                                     475            .1413              
 
                                     500            .1399              
 
                                     525            .1385              
 
                                     550            .1372              
 
The individual fund fee rate is    0    .25%. Based on the average group
net assets of the funds advised by FMR for December 1995, the annual
management fee rate would be calculated as follows:
Group Fee Rate         Individual Fund Fee Rate         Management Fee Rate   
 
 .1482%           +        0    .25%               =     .3982%                
 
On December 15, 1993, shareholders of the fund approved an increase in the
fund's individual fund fee rate from    0    .20% to    0    .25%.
One-twelfth of this annual management fee rate is applied to the fund's net
assets averaged for the most recent month, giving a dollar amount, which is
the fee for that month.
During the fiscal years ended December 31, 1995, 1994, and 1993, FMR
received $4,282,000, $4,605,000, and $4,677,000, respectively, for its
services as investment adviser to the fund. These fees were equivalent to
   0    .40%,    0    .41%, and    0    .37%, respectively, of the average
net assets of the fund for each of those years.
FMR may, from time to time, voluntarily reimburse all or a portion of a
class's operating expenses (exclusive of interest, taxes, brokerage
commissions,    and     extraordinary expenses). FMR retains the ability to
be repaid for these expense reimbursements in the amount that expenses fall
below the limit prior to the end of the fiscal year. Expense reimbursements
by FMR will increase a class's total returns and yield and repayment of the
reimbursement by a class will lower its total returns and yield.
   Effective July 1, 1996, FMR has voluntarily agreed, subject to revision
or termination, to reimburse Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class if
and to the extent that its aggregate operating expenses, including
management fees, are in excess of an annual rate of 1.00% (Class A), 1.65%
(Class B), and 0.75% (Institutional Class) of average net assets of the
applicable class.    
To comply with the California Code of Regulations, FMR will reimburse the
fund if and to the extent that the fund's aggregate annual operating
expenses exceed specified percentages of its average net assets. The
applicable percentages are 2 1/2% of the first $30 million, 2% of the next
$70 million, and 1 1/2% of average net assets in excess of $100 million.
When calculating the fund's expenses for purposes of this regulation, the
fund may exclude interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, and extraordinary
expenses, as well as a portion of its distribution plan expenses.
CONTRACTS WITH FMR AFFILIATES
UMB is the transfer agent for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class
shares of the fund. UMB has entered into sub-contract   s     with FIIOC,
an affiliate of FMR, under the terms of which FIIOC performs the processing
activities associated with providing transfer agent and shareholder
servicing functions for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class shares of
the fund. Under this arrangement FIIOC receives an annual account fee and
an asset-based fee based on account size and fund type for each retail
account and certain institutional accounts. With respect to certain
institutional retirement accounts, FIIOC receives an annual account fee and
an asset-based fee based on account type or fund type. These annual account
fees are subject to increase based on postal rate changes. FIIOC also
collects small account fees from certain accounts with balances of less
than $2,500. For accounts that FIIOC maintains on behalf of UMB, FIIOC
receives all such fees.
FIIOC bears the expense of typesetting, printing, and mailing prospectuses,
statements of additional information, and all other reports, notices, and
statements to shareholders, with the exception of proxy statements. Also,
FIIOC pays out-of-pocket expenses associated with transfer agent services.
UMB has an additional sub-contract with FSC   , an affiliate of FMR,    
pursuant to which FSC performs the calculations necessary to determine NAV
and dividends for Class A, Class B, and Institutional Class of the fund,
and maintains the fund's accounting records. The annual fee rates for these
pricing and bookkeeping services are based on the fund's average net
assets, specifically, .0400% of the first $500 million of average net
assets and .0200% of average net assets in excess of $500 million. The fee
is limited to a minimum of $60,000 and a maximum of $800,000 per year.
Pricing and bookkeeping fees, including reimbursement for out-of-pocket
expenses, paid to FSC for the fiscal years ended 1995, 1994, and 1993 were
$346,000, $362,000, and $358,000 respectively.
The transfer agent fees and charges, and pricing and bookkeeping fees
described above are paid to FIIOC and FSC, respectively, by UMB, which is
entitled to reimbursement from the appropriate class    or     the fund, as
applicable, for these expenses.
The fund has a distribution agreement with FDC, a Massachusetts corporation
organized on July 18, 1960. FDC is a broker-dealer registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is a member of the National Association
of Securities Dealers, Inc. The distribution agreement calls for FDC to use
all reasonable efforts, consistent with its other business, to secure
purchasers for shares of the fund, which are continuously offered.
Promotional and administrative expenses in connection with the offer and
sale of shares are paid by FMR.
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLANS
The Trustees have approved Distribution and Service Plans on behalf of each
class of shares of the fund (the Plans) pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the
1940 Act (the Rule). The Rule provides in substance that a mutual fund may
not engage directly or indirectly in financing any activity that is
primarily intended to result in the sale of shares of a fund except
pursuant to a plan approved on behalf of the fund under the Rule. The
Plans, as approved by the Trustees, allow Class A, Class B, and
Institutional Class shares of the fund and FMR to incur certain expenses
that might be considered to constitute    direct or     indirect payment by
the fund of distribution expenses.
Pursuant to the Class A Plan, FDC is paid a distribution fee as a
percentage of Class A's average net assets at an annual rate of up to
0.40%. Pursuant to the Class B Plan, FDC is paid a distribution fee as a
percentage of Class B's average net assets at an annual rate of up to
0.75%. For the purpose of calculating the distribution fees, average net
assets are determined as of the close of business on each day throughout
the month. Currently, the Trustees have approved a distribution fee for
Class A at an annual rate of 0.25%, and a distribution fee for Class B at
an annual rate of 0.65%. These fees may be increased only when, in the
opinion of the Trustees, it is in the best interests of the shareholders of
the applicable class to do so. Class B also pays investment professionals a
service fee at an annual rate of 0.25% of its average daily net assets
determined as of the close of business on each day throughout the month for
personal service and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts.
Under each Plan, if the payment of management fees by the fund to FMR is
deemed to be indirect financing by the fund of the distribution of its
shares, such payment is authorized by the Plans. The Class A Plan and the
Class B Plan specifically recognize that FMR may use its management fee
revenue, as well as its past profits or its other resources, to reimburse
FDC for expenses incurred in connection with the distribution of the
applicable class, including payments made to third parties that assist in
selling shares of the applicable class of the fund or to third parties,
including banks, that render shareholder support services. The
Institutional    Class     Plan specifically recognizes that FMR may use
its resources, including management fees, to pay expenses associated with
the sale of Institutional Class shares. This may include reimbursing FDC
for payments to third parties, such as banks or broker-dealers, that
provide shareholder support services or engage in the sale of Institutional
Class shares. The Trustees have authorized such payments for all classes of
the fund.
Prior to approving each Plan, the Trustees carefully considered all
pertinent factors relating to the implementation of the Plan, and have
determined that there is a reasonable likelihood that the Plan will benefit
the applicable class of the fund and its shareholders. In particular, the
Trustees noted that the Institutional Class Plan does not authorize
payments by the Institutional Class other than those made to FMR under its
management contract with the fund. To the extent that a Plan gives FMR and
FDC greater flexibility in connection with the distribution of shares of
the applicable class of the fund, additional sales of fund shares may
result. Furthermore, certain shareholder support services may be provided
more effectively under the Plans by local entities with whom shareholders
have other relationships.
The Class A and Class B Plans do not provide for specific payments by the
applicable class of any of the expenses of FDC, or obligate FDC or FMR to
perform any specific type or level of distribution activities or incur any
specific level of expense in connection with distribution activities. After
payments by FDC for advertising, marketing and distribution, and payments
to third parties, the amounts remaining, if any, may be used as FDC may
elect.
Each class's Plan was approved by FMR as the then sole shareholder of the
class on    July 1, 1996    . 
The Glass-Steagall Act generally prohibits federally and state chartered or
supervised banks from engaging in the business of underwriting, selling, or
distributing securities. Although the scope of this prohibition under the
Glass-Steagall Act has not been clearly defined by the courts or
appropriate regulatory agencies, FDC believes that the Glass-Steagall Act
should not preclude a bank from performing shareholder support services, or
servicing and recordkeeping functions. FDC intends to engage banks only to
perform such functions. However, changes in federal or state statutes and
regulations pertaining to the permissible activities of banks and their
affiliates or subsidiaries, as well as further judicial or administrative
decisions or interpretations, could prevent a bank from continuing to
perform all or a part of the contemplated services. If a bank were
prohibited from so acting, the Trustees would consider what actions, if
any, would be necessary to continue to provide efficient and effective
shareholder services. In such event, changes in the operation of the fund
might occur, including possible termination of any automatic investment or
redemption or other services then provided by the bank. It is not expected
that shareholders would suffer any adverse financial consequences as a
result of any of these occurrences. In addition, state securities laws on
this issue may differ from the interpretations of federal law expressed
herein, and banks and financial institutions may be required to register as
dealers pursuant to state law. 
The fund may execute portfolio transactions with, and purchase securities
issued by, depository institutions that receive payments under the
Plan   s    . No preference for the instruments of such depository
institutions will be shown in the selection of investments.
DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST
TRUST ORGANIZATION. Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund is a fund of
Fidelity Municipal Trust   ,     an open-end management investment company
originally organized as a Maryland corporation on November 22, 1976   
    and reorganized as a Massachusetts business trust on June 22, 1984, at
which time its name changed to Fidelity Municipal Bond Portfolio. On
February 20, 1996, the fund's name was changed to Fidelity Municipal Bond
Fund, and on June 30, 1996, the fund's name was changed to Fidelity Advisor
Municipal Bond Fund. On March 1, 1986, the trust's name was changed to
Fidelity Municipal Trust. Currently, there are seven funds of the trust:
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund; Fidelity Aggressive Municipal Fund;
Fidelity Insured Municipal Income Fund; Fidelity Ohio Municipal Income
Fund; Fidelity Michigan Municipal Income Fund; Fidelity Minnesota Municipal
Income Fund; and Spartan Pennsylvania Municipal Income Fund. The
Declaration of Trust permits the Trustees to create additional funds.
In the event that FMR ceases to be the investment adviser to the trust or a
fund, the right of the trust or fund to use the identifying names
"Fidelity" and "Spartan" may be withdrawn.
The assets of the trust received for the issue or sale of shares of each
fund and all income, earnings, profits, and proceeds thereof, subject only
to the rights of creditors, are especially allocated to such fund, and
constitute the underlying assets of such fund. The underlying assets of
each fund are segregated on the books of account, and are to be charged
with the liabilities with respect to such fund and with a share of the
general expenses of the trust. Expenses with respect to the trust are to be
allocated in proportion to the asset value of the respective funds, except
where allocations of direct expense can otherwise be fairly made. The
officers of the trust, subject to the general supervision of the Board of
Trustees, have the power to determine which expenses are allocable to a
given fund, or which are general or allocable to all of the funds. In the
event of the dissolution or liquidation of the trust, shareholders of each
fund are entitled to receive as a class the underlying assets of such fund
available for distribution.
SHAREHOLDER AND TRUSTEE LIABILITY. The trust is an entity of the type
commonly known as a "Massachusetts business trust." Under Massachusetts
law, shareholders of such a trust may, under certain circumstances, be held
personally liable for the obligations of the trust. The Declaration of
Trust provides that the trust shall not have any claim against shareholders
except for the payment of the purchase price of shares and requires that
each agreement, obligation, or instrument entered into or executed by the
trust or the Trustees include a provision limiting the obligations created
thereby to the trust and its assets. The Declaration of Trust provides for
indemnification out of each fund's property of any shareholder held
personally liable for the obligations of the fund. The Declaration of Trust
also provides that each fund shall, upon request, assume the defense of any
claim made against any shareholder for any act or obligation of the fund
and satisfy any judgment thereon. Thus, the risk of a shareholder incurring
financial loss on account of shareholder liability is limited to
circumstances in which a fund itself would be unable to meet its
obligations. FMR believes that, in view of the above, the risk of personal
liability to shareholders is remote.
The Declaration of Trust further provides that the Trustees, if they have
exercised reasonable care, will not be liable for any neglect or
wrongdoing, but nothing in the Declaration of Trust protects Trustees
against any liability to which they would otherwise be subject by reason of
willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of
the duties involved in the conduct of their office. Claims asserted against
one class of shares may subject the holders of another class of shares to
certain liabilities.
VOTING RIGHTS. Each fund's capital consists of shares of beneficial
interest. As a shareholder, you receive one vote for each dollar value of
net asset value you own. The shares have no preemptive rights, and Class A
and Institutional Class shares have no conversion rights; the voting and
dividend rights, the conversion rights of Class B shares, the right of
redemption, and the privilege of exchange are described in the Prospectus.
Shares are fully paid and nonassessable, except as set forth under the
heading "Shareholder and Trustee Liability" above. Shareholders
representing 10% or more of the trust, a fund, or a class may, as set forth
in the Declaration of Trust, call meetings of the trust, fund, or class for
any purpose related to the trust, fund, or class, as the case may be,
including, in the case of a meeting of the entire trust, the purpose of
voting on removal of one or more Trustees. The trust or any fund may be
terminated upon the sale of its assets to another open-end management
investment company, or upon liquidation and distribution of its assets, if
approved by vote of the holders of a majority of the trust or the fund, as
determined by the current value of each shareholder's investment in the
fund or trust. If not so terminated, the trust and its funds will continue
indefinitely.
CUSTODIAN. UMB Bank, n.a., 1010 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, is
custodian of the assets of the fund. The custodian is responsible for the
safekeeping of a fund's assets and the appointment of the subcustodian
banks and clearing agencies. The custodian takes no part in determining the
investment policies of a fund or in deciding which securities are purchased
or sold by a fund. However, a fund may invest in obligations of the
custodian and may purchase securities from or sell securities to the
custodian.
FMR, its officers and directors, its affiliated companies, and the Board of
Trustees may, from time to time, conduct transactions with various banks,
including banks serving as custodians for certain funds advised by FMR.
Transactions that have occurred to date include mortgages and personal and
general business loans. In the judgment of FMR, the terms and conditions of
those transactions were not influenced by existing or potential custodial
or other fund relationships.
AUDITOR.    Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P., One Post Office Square, Boston,
MA,     serves as the trust's independent accountant. The auditor examines
financial statements for the fund and provides other audit, tax, and
related services.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The fund's financial statements and financial highlights for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 1995, are included in the fund's Annual Report,
which is a separate report supplied with this SAI. The fund's financial
statements and financial highlights are incorporated herein by reference. 
APPENDIX
DOLLAR-WEIGHTED AVERAGE MATURITY is derived by multiplying the value of
each investment by the time remaining to its maturity, adding these
calculations, and then dividing the total by the value of the fund's
portfolio. An obligation's maturity is typically determined on a stated
final maturity basis, although there are some exceptions to this rule.
For example, if it is probable that the issuer of an instrument will take
advantage of a maturity-shortening device, such as a call, refunding, or
redemption provision, the date on which the instrument will probably be
called, refunded, or redeemed may be considered to be its maturity date.
When a municipal bond issuer has committed to call an issue of bonds and
has established an independent escrow account that is sufficient to, and is
pledged to, refund that issue, the number of days to maturity for the
prerefunded bond is considered to be the number of days to the announced
call date of the bonds.
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
INSTITUTIONAL CLASS PROSPECTUS
 
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
FORM N-1A                          
 
ITEM NUMBER   PROSPECTUS SECTION   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>   <C>    <C>                              <C>                                                   
1            ..............................   Cover Page                                            
 
2     a      ..............................   Expenses                                              
 
      b,c    ..............................   *                                                     
 
3     a      ..............................   Financial Highlights                                  
 
      b      ..............................   *                                                     
 
      c      ..............................   Performance                                           
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page                                            
 
4     a      i.............................   Charter                                               
 
             ii...........................    Investment Principles and Risks; The Fund's           
                                              Investment Approach; Securities and Investment        
                                              Practices; Fundamental Investment Policies and        
                                              Restrictions                                          
 
      b      ..............................   Securities and Investment Practices                   
 
      c      ..............................   Who May Want to Invest; Investment Principles         
                                              and Risks; Securities and Investment Practices        
 
5     a      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      b      i.............................   Cover Page; Charter                                   
 
             ii...........................    Charter; Breakdown of Expenses                        
 
             iii..........................    Expenses; Breakdown of Expenses                       
 
      c      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page; Charter; Breakdown of Expenses            
 
      e      ..............................   Charter; Breakdown of Expenses                        
 
      f      ..............................   Expenses                                              
 
      g      ..............................   Expenses; Charter                                     
 
      5A     ..............................   *                                                     
 
6     a      i.............................   Charter                                               
 
             ii...........................    How to Buy Shares; How to Sell Shares; Investor       
                                              Services; Transaction Details; Exchange               
                                              Restrictions; Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers     
 
             iii..........................    *                                                     
 
      b      .............................    Charter                                               
 
      c      ..............................   Charter                                               
 
      d      ..............................   Cover Page; Who May Want to Invest                    
 
      e      ..............................   Cover Page; How to Buy Shares; How to Sell            
                                              Shares; Investor Services; Exchange Restrictions;     
                                              Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers; Transaction      
                                              Details                                               
 
      f, g   ..............................   Dividends, Capital Gains, and Taxes                   
 
7     a      ..............................   Cover Page; Charter                                   
 
      b      ..............................   How to Buy Shares; Transaction Details                
 
      c      ..............................   Sales Charge Reductions and Waivers; How to           
                                              Buy Shares; Transaction Details                       
 
      d      ..............................   How to Buy Shares                                     
 
      e      ..............................   Transaction Details; Breakdown of Expenses            
 
      f      ..............................   Expenses; Breakdown of Expenses                       
 
8            ..............................   How to Sell Shares; Investor Services; Transaction    
                                              Details; Exchange Restrictions                        
 
9            ..............................   *                                                     
 
</TABLE>
 
*Not Applicable
 
 
  
Please read this prospectus before investing, and keep it on file for
future reference. It contains important information, including how the fund
invests and the services available to shareholders.
FIDELITY ADVISOR
MUNICIPAL BOND
FUND
INSTITUTIONAL CLASS
To learn more about the fund and its investments, you can obtain a copy of
the fund's most recent financial report and portfolio listing or a copy of
the Statement of Additional Information (SAI) dated June 30, 1996. The SAI
has been filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and is
incorporated herein by reference (legally forms a part of the prospectus).
For a free copy of either document, contact Fidelity Distributors
Corporation (FDC), 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA 02109, or your
investment professional.
 
MUTUAL FUND SHARES ARE NOT DEPOSITS OR 
OBLIGATIONS OF, OR GUARANTEED BY, ANY 
DEPOSITORY INSTITUTION. SHARES ARE NOT 
INSURED BY THE FDIC, FEDERAL RESERVE 
BOARD OR ANY OTHER AGENCY, AND ARE SUBJECT 
TO INVESTMENT RISKS, INCLUDING POSSIBLE 
LOSS OF PRINCIPAL AMOUNT INVESTED.
 
LIKE ALL MUTUAL FUNDS, THESE 
SECURITIES HAVE NOT BEEN APPROVED OR 
DISAPPROVED BY THE SECURITIES AND 
EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE 
SECURITIES COMMISSION, NOR HAS THE 
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION 
OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION 
PASSED UPON THE ACCURACY OR 
ADEQUACY OF THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY 
REPRESENTATION TO THE CONTRARY IS A 
CRIMINAL OFFENSE.
AMUNI-pro-0696
Municipal Bond seeks to provide as high a level of interest income exempt
from federal income tax as is consistent with preservation of capital.
PROSPECTUS
JUNE 30, 1996(FIDELITY_LOGO_GRAPHIC) 82 DEVONSHIRE STREET, BOSTON, MA 02109
CONTENTS
 
 
KEY FACTS                  WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST                              
 
                           EXPENSES Institutional Class's yearly operating     
                           expenses.                                           
 
                           FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS A summary of the fund's        
                           financial data.                                     
 
                           PERFORMANCE How the fund has done over time.        
 
THE FUND IN DETAIL         CHARTER How the fund is organized.                  
 
                           INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS The fund's          
                           overall approach to investing.                      
 
                           BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES How operating costs           
                           are calculated and what they include.               
 
YOUR ACCOUNT               TYPES OF ACCOUNTS Different ways to set up your     
                           account.                                            
 
                           HOW TO BUY SHARES Opening an account and            
                           making additional investments.                      
 
                           HOW TO SELL SHARES Taking money out and closing     
                           your account.                                       
 
                           INVESTOR SERVICES Services to help you manage       
                           your account.                                       
 
SHAREHOLDER AND            DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS,                           
ACCOUNT POLICIES           AND TAXES                                           
 
                           TRANSACTION DETAILS Share price calculations and    
                           the timing of purchases and redemptions.            
 
                           EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS                               
 
   KEY FACTS    
 
 
WHO MAY WANT TO INVEST
Institutional Class shares are offered to (i) accounts managed by a bank
trust department and other trust institutions, (ii) accounts managed by a
broker-dealer and (iii) accounts managed on a discretionary basis by a
registered investment advisor (RIA) (collectively, eligible investors).
Shares are available only to eligible investors that have signed a
participation agreement with FDC. The participation agreement specifies
certain aggregate asset minimums and asset qualifications, trading
guidelines, marketing restrictions and program requirements.
For the purpose of exchanging into the fund, eligible investors with
existing Institutional Class accounts will be required to sign and comply
with a participation agreement in order to purchase additional shares.
Investors prior to June 30, 1995 that have not signed a participation
agreement will be allowed to continue investing in Institutional Class
shares under the terms of this relationship until June 30, 1997, after
which they will be prevented from making new or subsequent purchases in
Institutional Class, except that employee benefit plans will be permitted
to make additional purchases of Institutional Class shares.
The fund may be appropriate for investors in higher tax brackets who seek
high current income that is free from federal income tax. The fund is
designed for investors who are interested in investment-grade quality
ratings, but who are willing to forego the highest yields in pursuit of
greater share price stability.
The value of the fund's investments and the income they generate vary from
day to day, and generally reflect changes in interest rates, market
conditions, and other political and economic news.
The fund is not in itself a balanced investment plan. You should consider
your investment objective and tolerance for risk when making an investment
decision. When you sell your fund shares, they may be worth more or less
than what you paid for them.
The fund is composed of multiple classes of shares.    All    
class   es     of the fund ha   ve     a common investment objective and
investment portfolio. Class A shares have a front-end sales charge, or may
be subject to a contingent deferred sales charge (CDSC), and pay a
distribution fee. Class B shares do not have a front-end sales charge, but
do have a CDSC, and pay a distribution fee and a shareholder service fee.
Because Institutional Class shares have no sales charge, and do not pay a
distribution fee or a shareholder service fee, Institutional Class shares
are expected to have a higher total return than Class A or Class B shares.
You may obtain more information about Class A and Class B shares, which are
not offered through this prospectus, by calling 1-800-843-3001 or from your
investment professional.
EXPENSES
SHAREHOLDER TRANSACTION EXPENSES are charges you pay when you buy, sell, or
hold Institutional Class shares of the fund.
Maximum sales charge on purchases and   None   
reinvested distributions                       
 
Maximum deferred sales charge   None   
 
Redemption fee   None   
 
Exchange fee   None   
 
Annual account maintenance fee   $12.0   
(for accounts under $2,500)      0       
 
ANNUAL OPERATING EXPENSES are paid out of the fund's assets. The fund pays
a management fee to Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR). It also
incurs other expenses for services such as maintaining shareholder records
and furnishing shareholder statements and financial reports.
Institutional Class's expenses are factored into its share price or
dividends and are not charged directly to shareholder accounts (see
"Breakdown of Expenses" on page ).
The following are projections based on estimated expenses of the
Institutional Class, and are calculated as a percentage of average net
assets of the Institutional Class of the fund.
Management fee                                   0.40%              
 
12b-1 fee (Distribution Fee)                     None               
 
Other expenses (after reimbursement)                 0.35    %[A]   
 
Total operating expenses (after reimbursement)      0.75    %       
 
[A]PROJECTIONS BASED ON ESTIMATED EXPENSES FOR FIRST YEAR.
EXPENSE TABLE EXAMPLE: You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000
investment in Institutional Class shares, assuming a 5% annual return and
full redemption at the end of each time period:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                  <C>                   <C>                   <C>                   
1 Year               3 Years               5 Years               10 Years              
 
        $    8               $    24               $    42               $    93       
 
</TABLE>
 
THESE EXAMPLES ILLUSTRATE THE EFFECT OF EXPENSES, BUT ARE NOT MEANT TO
SUGGEST ACTUAL OR EXPECTED COSTS OR RETURNS, ALL OF WHICH MAY VARY.
   Effective July 1, 1996,     FMR has voluntarily agreed to reimburse   
    the Institutional Class to the extent that total operating expenses   
(excluding interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, and extraordinary
expenses)     exceed    0.75    % of its average net assets. If this
agreement were not in effect, other expenses and total operating expenses,
as a percentage of the Institutional Class's average net assets, would have
   been 1.14    %    (estimated)     and    1.54    %    (estimated)    ,
respectively.
FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS
The financial highlights table that follows and the fund's financial
statements are included in the fund's Annual Report and have been audited
by    Coopers & Lybrand L.L.P.    , independent accountants. Their report
on the financial statements and financial highlights is included in the
Annual Report. The financial statements, the financial highlights, and the
report are incorporated by reference into the fund's SAI, which may be
obtained free of charge from FDC or your investment professional.
   The Institutional Class is expected to commence operations on or about
July 1, 1996.
MUNICIPAL BOND FUNDAAA    
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>         <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>        <C>         <C>          <C>        <C>          <C>        <C>       
    33.Selected Per-Share Data
 and Ratios                                                           
 
 34.Years ended 
December    1995        1994         1993B       1992        1991        1990        1989        1988        1987        1986       
 31                                                                   
 
 35.Net asset 
value,      $ 7.370     $ 8.690      $ 8.500     $ 8.470     $ 8.130     $ 8.130     $ 7.950     $ 7.600     $ 8.280     $ 7.420    
 beginning of period                                                   
 
 36.Income 
from         .408        .455         .487        .519        .526        .541        .556        .558        .548        .553      
 Investment Operations                                               
  Net interest income                                                 
 
 37. Net realized 
and         .904        (1.180)      .600        .210        .410        --          .180        .350        (.680)      .860      
 unrealized gain (loss)                                               
 
 38. Total from 
investment  1.312       (.725)       1.087       .729        .936        .541        .736        .908        (.132)      1.413     
 operations                                                           
 
 39.Less 
Distributions (.408)    (.455)       (.487)      (.519)      (.526)      (.541)      (.556)      (.558)      (.548)      (.553)    
  From net interest income                                            
 
 40. From net 
realized    --          (.010)       (.410)      (.180)      (.070)      --          --          --          --          --        
 gain                                                                  
 
 41. In excess of 
net        (.004)      (.130)       --          --          --          --          --          --          --          --        
 realized gain                                                        
 
 42. Total 
distributions (.412)   (.595)       (.897)      (.699)      (.596)      (.541)      (.556)      (.558)      (.548)      (.553)    
 
 43.Net asset value, 
end of      $ 8.270     $ 7.370      $ 8.690     $ 8.500     $ 8.470     $ 8.130     $ 8.130     $ 7.950     $ 7.600     $ 8.280    
 period                                                                
 
 44.Total 
return       18.15       (8.49)       13.17       8.93        11.91       6.91        9.56        12.30       (1.56)      19.54     
             %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %         
 
 45.Net assets, 
end of      $ 1,082     $ 1,005      $ 1,262     $ 1,192     $ 1,163     $ 1,070     $ 1,054     $ 984       $ 903       $ 1,141    
 period (In millions)                                                  
 
 46.Ratio of 
expenses to  .57         .53          .49         .49         .50         .50         .50         .51         .57         .51       
 average net 
assets       %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %         
 
 47.Ratio of net 
interest     5.14        5.68         5.51        6.11        6.35        6.71        6.90        7.11        7.03        6.90      
 income to 
average      %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %         
 net assets                                                            
 
 48.Portfolio turnover 
rate         72          95           74          53          33          49          64          46          72          72        
             %           %            %           %           %           %           %           %           %           %
    
 
</TABLE>
 
   A THE FINANCIAL HIGHLIGHTS ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS, THE ORIGINAL
CLASS OF THE FUND.
B EFFECTIVE JANUARY 1, 1993, THE FUND ADOPTED STATEMENT OF POSITION 93-2,
"DETERMINATION, DISCLOSURE, AND FINANCIAL STATEMENT PRESENTATION OF INCOME,
CAPITAL GAIN, AND RETURN OF CAPITAL DISTRIBUTIONS BY INVESTMENT COMPANIES."
AS A RESULT, NET INTEREST INCOME PER SHARE MAY REFLECT CERTAIN
RECLASSIFICATIONS RELATED TO BOOK TO TAX DIFFERENCES.    
PERFORMANCE
Bond fund performance can be measured as TOTAL RETURN or YIELD. The total
returns that follow are based on historical fund results.
The fund's fiscal year runs from January 1 through December 31. The tables
at right show performance over past fiscal years. The chart below presents
calendar year performance.
AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURNS[A]
Fiscal years ended    Past    Past 5   Past    
December 31, 1995     1       years    10      
                      year             years   
 
Municipal Bond Fund -      18.15%    8.33%    8.73%   
Institutional Class                                   
 
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURNS[A]
Fiscal years ended   Past    Past 5   Past    
December 31, 1995    1       years    10      
                     year             years   
 
Municipal Bond Fund -     18.15%              130.90   
Institutional Class                49.17%   %          
 
   [A] INITIAL OFFERING OF INSTITUTIONAL CLASS SHARES TOOK PLACE ON JULY
1,1996.     INSTITUTIONAL CLASS SHARES DO NOT BEAR A SALES LOAD OR A 12B-1
FEE. RETURNS    PRIOR TO JULY 1, 1996 ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS, THE
ORIGINAL CLASS OF THE     FUND, WHICH CLASS ALSO DOES NOT BEAR A SALES LOAD
OR A 12B-1 FEE.
YEAR-BY-YEAR TOTAL RETURNS
    
 
 
 
    
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>    <C>         <C>      <C>       <C>     <C>      <C>      <C>          <C>             <C>             <C>           
Calendar 
years+ 1995            1994  1993     1992    1991     1990     1989            1988            1987            1986               
 
MUNICIPAL BOND 
FUND -     18.15    -8.49    13.17    8.93    11.91    6.91%    9.56%           12.30           -1.56           19.54             
INSTITUTIONAL 
CLASS         %       %        %        %       %                              %               %               %                  
 
Lipper Gen. Muni. Debt 
Funds      16.84    -6.50    12.47    8.79    12.09    6.05%    9.65            11.53           -0.94           18.74             
Avg.          %       %        %        %       %                 %            %               %               %                  
 
Consumer Price 
Index      2.54     2.67     2.75     2.90    3.06     6.11%    4.65            4.42            4.43            1.10%             
              %       %         %        %       %                %            %               %                                  
 
</TABLE>
 
 
Percentage (%)
Row: 1, Col: 1, Value: 18.15
Row: 2, Col: 1, Value: -8.49
Row: 3, Col: 1, Value: 13.17
Row: 4, Col: 1, Value: 8.93
Row: 5, Col: 1, Value: 11.91
Row: 6, Col: 1, Value: 6.91
Row: 7, Col: 1, Value: 9.56
Row: 8, Col: 1, Value: 12.3
Row: 9, Col: 1, Value: -1.56
Row: 10, Col: 1, Value: 19.54
(LARGE SOLID BOX) MUNICIPAL BOND FUND -
INSTITUTIONAL CLASS
+ INITIAL OFFERING OF INSTITUTIONAL CLASS SHARES TOOK PLACE ON JULY   
1    , 1996. INSTITUTIONAL CLASS SHARES DO NOT BEAR A SALES LOAD OR A 12B-1
FEE. RETURNS PRIOR TO JULY    1    , 1996 ARE THOSE OF INITIAL CLASS, THE
ORIGINAL CLASS OF THE FUND, WHICH CLASS ALSO DOES NOT BEAR A SALES LOAD OR
A 12B-1 FEE.
EXPLANATION OF TERMS
TOTAL RETURN is the change in value of an investment in the fund over a
given period, assuming reinvestment of any dividends and capital gains. A
CUMULATIVE TOTAL RETURN reflects actual performance over a stated period of
time. An AVERAGE ANNUAL TOTAL RETURN is a hypothetical rate of return that,
if achieved annually, would have produced the same cumulative total return
if performance had been constant over the entire period. Average annual
total returns smooth out variations in performance; they are not the same
as actual year-by-year results.
YIELD refers to the income generated by an investment in the fund over a
given period of time, expressed as an annual percentage rate. Yields are
calculated according to a standard that is required for all stock and bond
funds. Because this differs from other accounting methods, the quoted yield
may not equal the income actually paid to shareholders.
A TAX-EQUIVALENT YIELD shows what an investor would have to earn before
taxes to equal a tax-free yield.
THE COMPETITIVE FUNDS AVERAGE is the Lipper General Municipal Debt Funds
Average, which currently reflects the performance of over    225     mutual
funds with similar objectives. This average, which assumes reinvestment of
distributions, is published by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc.
THE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX is a widely recognized measure of inflation
calculated by the U.S. government.
The fund's recent strategies, performance, and holdings are detailed twice
a year in financial reports, which are sent to all shareholders.    For
current performance or a free annual report, please contact your investment
professional, or call 1-800-843-3001.    
TOTAL RETURNS AND YIELDS ARE BASED ON PAST RESULTS AND ARE NOT AN
INDICATION OF FUTURE PERFORMANCE.
   THE FUND IN DETAIL    
 
 
CHARTER
MUNICIPAL BOND IS A MUTUAL FUND: an investment that pools shareholders'
money and invests it toward a specified goal. The fund is a diversified
fund of Fidelity Municipal Trust, an open-end management investment company
organized as a Massachusetts business trust on June 22, 1984.
THE FUND IS GOVERNED BY A BOARD OF TRUSTEES which is responsible for
protecting the interests of shareholders. The trustees are experienced
executives who meet throughout the year to oversee the fund's activities,
review contractual arrangements with companies that provide services to the
fund, and review the fund's performance. The majority of trustees are not
otherwise affiliated with Fidelity.
THE FUND MAY HOLD SPECIAL MEETINGS AND MAIL PROXY MATERIALS. These meetings
may be called to elect or remove trustees, change fundamental policies,
approve a management contract, or for other purposes. Shareholders not
attending these meetings are encouraged to vote by proxy. The transfer
agent will mail proxy materials in advance, including a voting card and
information about the proposals to be voted on. The number of votes you are
entitled to is based upon the dollar value of your investment.
Separate votes are taken by each class of shares, fund, or trust, if a
matter affects just that class of shares, fund, or trust, respectively.
FMR AND ITS AFFILIATES
Fidelity Investments is one of the largest investment management
organizations in the United States and has its principal business address
at 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02109. It includes a number
of different subsidiaries and divisions which provide a variety of
financial services and products. The fund employs various Fidelity
companies to perform activities required for its operation.
The fund is managed by FMR, which chooses the fund's investments and
handles its business affairs.
As of April 30, 19   96    , FMR advised funds having approximately
   26     million shareholder accounts with a total value of more than
$   386     billion.
George Fischer is manager of Municipal Bond, which he has managed since
October 1995. He also manages Spartan Bond Strategist, Insured Municipal
Income, and various trust accounts. Mr. Fischer joined Fidelity in 1989.
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions.
FDC distributes and markets Fidelity's funds and services. Fidelity
Investments Institutional Operations Company (FIIOC) performs transfer
agent servicing functions for the Institutional Class shares of the fund.
FMR Corp. is the ultimate parent company of FMR. Members of the Edward C.
Johnson 3d family are the predominant owners of a class of shares of common
stock representing approximately 49% of the voting power of FMR Corp. Under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act), control of a company is
presumed where one individual or group of individuals owns more than 25% of
the voting stock of that company; therefore, the Johnson family may be
deemed under the 1940 Act to form a controlling group with respect to FMR
Corp.
UMB Bank, n.a. (UMB) is the fund's transfer agent, although it employs
FIIOC to perform these functions for the Institutional Class of the fund.
UMB is located at 1010 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri 64106.
To carry out the fund's transactions, FMR may use its broker-dealer
affiliates and other firms that sell fund shares, provided that the fund
receives services and commission rates comparable to those of other
broker-dealers.
INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES AND RISKS
THE FUND'S INVESTMENT APPROACH
The fund seeks as high a level of federally tax-free income as is
consistent with preservation of capital by investing primarily in
investment   -    grade municipal bonds. The fund normally invests at least
80% of its assets in municipal securities whose interest is free from
federal income tax. The fund may, under normal conditions, invest up to
100% of its assets in municipal securities subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax.
   Although the fund can invest in securities of any maturity, FMR seeks to
manage the fund so that it generally reacts to changes in interest rates
similarly to municipal bonds with maturities between 8 and 18 years. As of
the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, the fund's dollar-weighted average
maturity was approximately 13 years.    
The total return from a bond is a combination of income and price gains or
losses. While income is the most important component of bond returns over
time, the fund's emphasis on income does not mean that the fund invests
only in the highest-yielding bonds available, or that it can avoid risks to
principal. In selecting investments for the fund, FMR considers a bond's
income potential together with its potential for price gains or losses. FMR
focuses on assembling a portfolio of income-producing securities that it
believes will provide the best tradeoff between risk and return within the
range of securities that are eligible investments for the fund.
The fund's yield and share price change daily and are based on changes in
interest rates, market conditions, other economic and political news, and
on the quality and maturity of its investments. In general, bond prices
rise when interest rates fall, and vice versa. This effect is usually more
pronounced for longer-term securities. FMR may use various investment
techniques to hedge a portion of the fund's risk, but there is no guarantee
that these strategies will work as intended. When you sell your shares,
they may be worth more or less than what you paid for them.
If you are subject to the federal alternative minimum tax, you should note
that the fund may invest all of its assets in municipal securities issued
to finance private activities. The interest from these investments is a
tax-preference item for purposes of the tax.
FMR normally invests the fund's assets according to its investment strategy
and does not expect to invest in federally taxable obligations. The fund
also reserves the right to invest without limitation in short-term
instruments, to hold a substantial amount of uninvested cash, or to invest
more than normally permitted in federally taxable obligations for
temporary, defensive purposes.
SECURITIES AND INVESTMENT PRACTICES
The following pages contain more detailed information about types of
instruments in which the fund may invest, strategies FMR may employ in
pursuit of the fund's investment objective, and a summary of related risks.
Any restrictions listed supplement those discussed earlier in this section.
A complete listing of the fund's limitations and more detailed information
about the fund's investments are contained in the fund's SAI. Policies and
limitations are considered at the time of purchase; the sale of instruments
is not required in the event of a subsequent change in circumstances.
FMR may not buy all of these instruments or use all of these techniques
unless it believes that they are consistent with the fund's investment
objective and policies and that doing so will help the fund achieve its
goal.    Fund     holdings and recent investment strategies are
   detailed     in the fund's financial reports, which are sent to
shareholders twice a year. For a free SAI or financial report,    call    
your investment professional.
DEBT SECURITIES. Bonds and other debt instruments are used by issuers to
borrow money from investors. The issuer pays the investor a fixed or
variable rate of interest, and must repay the amount borrowed at maturity.
Some debt securities, such as zero coupon bonds, do not pay current
interest, but are purchased at a discount from their face values. In
general, bond prices rise when interest rates fall, and vice versa. Debt
securities have varying degrees of quality and varying levels of
sensitivity to changes in interest rates. Longer-term bonds are generally
more sensitive to interest rate changes than short-term bonds.
Investment-grade debt securities are medium- and high-quality securities.
Some, however, may possess speculative characteristics and may be more
sensitive to economic changes and to changes in the financial condition of
issuers.
RESTRICTIONS:    The fund invests only in investment-grade securities. A
security is considered to be investment-grade if it is judged by FMR to be
of equivalent quality to securities rated Baa or BBB or higher by Moody's
Investor Service (Moody's) or Standard & Poor's (S&P), respectively.
However, the fund will limit its investments in medium quality securities,
as judged by FMR, to one-third of its total assets; will not purchase
securities rated below Baa or BBB by Moody's or S&P, respectively; and will
not invest more than 20% of its assets in securities not rated by Moody's
and S&P.    
MUNICIPAL SECURITIES are issued to raise money for a variety of public
purposes, including general financing for state and local governments, or
financing for specific projects or public facilities. They may be issued in
anticipation of future revenues, and may be backed by the full taxing power
of a municipality, the revenues from a specific project, or the credit of a
private organization. The value of some or all municipal securities may be
affected by uncertainties in the municipal market related to legislation or
litigation involving the taxation of municipal securities or the rights of
municipal securities holders. The fund may own a municipal security
directly or through a participation interest.
CREDIT SUPPORT. Issuers may employ various forms of credit enhancement,
including letters of credit, guarantees, or insurance from a bank,
insurance company, or other entity. These arrangements expose the fund to
the credit risk of the entity. In the case of foreign entities, extensive
public information about the entity may not be available and the entity may
be subject to unfavorable political, economic, or governmental developments
which might affect its ability to honor its commitment.
ASSET-BACKED SECURITIES include interests in pools of purchase contracts,
financing leases, or sales agreements entered into by municipalities. These
securities usually rely on continued payments by a municipality, and may
also be subject to prepayment risk.
VARIABLE AND FLOATING RATE SECURITIES have interest rates that are
periodically adjusted either at specific intervals or whenever a benchmark
rate changes. Inverse floaters have interest rates that move in the
opposite direction from a benchmark, making the security's market value
more volatile.
MUNICIPAL LEASE OBLIGATIONS are used by municipalities to acquire land,
equipment, or facilities. If the municipality stops making payments or
transfers its obligations to a private entity, the obligation could lose
value or become taxable.
OTHER MUNICIPAL SECURITIES may include obligations of U.S. territories and
possessions such as Guam, the Virgin Islands, and Puerto Rico, and their
political subdivisions and public corporations.
PUT FEATURES entitle the holder to put (sell back) an instrument to the
issuer or a financial intermediary. In exchange for this benefit, the fund
may pay periodic fees or accept a lower interest rate. Demand features and
standby commitments are types of put features.
PRIVATE ENTITIES may be involved in some municipal securities. For example,
industrial revenue bonds are backed by private entities, and resource
recovery bonds often involve private corporations. The viability of a
project or tax incentives could affect the value and credit quality of
these securities.
ADJUSTING INVESTMENT EXPOSURE. The fund can use various techniques to
increase or decrease its exposure to changing security prices, interest
rates,    commodity prices,     or other factors that affect security
values. These techniques may involve derivative transactions such as buying
and selling options and futures contracts, and purchasing indexed
securities.
FMR can use these practices to adjust the risk and return characteristics
of the fund's portfolio of investments. If FMR judges market conditions
incorrectly or employs a strategy that does not correlate well with the
fund's investments, these techniques could result in a loss, regardless of
whether the intent was to reduce risk or increase return. These techniques
may increase the volatility of the fund and may involve a small investment
of cash relative to the magnitude of the risk assumed. In addition, these
techniques could result in a loss if the counterparty to the transaction
does not perform as promised.
ILLIQUID AND RESTRICTED SECURITIES. Some investments may be determined by
FMR, under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, to be illiquid, which
means that they may be difficult to sell promptly at an acceptable price.
The sale of some illiquid securities, and some other securities, may be
subject to legal restrictions. Difficulty in selling securities may result
in a loss or may be costly to the fund.
RESTRICTIONS   :     The fund may not purchase a security if, as a result,
more than 10% of its assets would be invested in illiquid securities. 
WHEN-ISSUED AND DELAYED-DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS are trading practices in
which payment and delivery for the securities take place at a future date.
The market value of a security could change during this period.
DIVERSIFICATION. Diversifying a fund's investment portfolio can reduce the
risks of investing. This may include limiting the amount of money invested
in any one issuer or, on a broader scale, in any one industry or type of
project. Economic, business, or political changes can affect all securities
of a similar type.
RESTRICTIONS: With respect to 75% of its total assets, the fund may not
purchase a security if, as a result, more than 5% would be invested in the
securities of any one issuer. This limitation does not apply to U.S.
Government securities. The fund may invest more than 25% of its total
assets in tax-free securities that finance similar types of projects.
BORROWING. The fund may borrow from banks or from other funds advised by
FMR, or through reverse repurchase agreements. If the fund borrows money,
its share price may be subject to greater fluctuation until the borrowing
is paid off. If the fund makes additional investments while borrowings are
outstanding, this may be considered a form of leverage.
RESTRICTIONS: The fund may borrow only for temporary or emergency purposes,
but not in an amount exceeding 331/3% of its total assets.
FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT POLICIES AND RESTRICTIONS
Some of the policies and restrictions discussed on the preceding pages are
fundamental, that is, subject to change only by shareholder approval. The
following paragraph   s     restate all those that are fundamental. All
policies stated throughout this prospectus, other than those identified in
the following paragraph   s    , can be changed without shareholder
approval.
The fund seeks to provide as high a level of interest income exempt from
federal income tax as is consistent with preservation of capital.
The fund invests in a diversified portfolio of municipal bonds. The fund
will invest primarily in municipal bonds judged by FMR to be of high   
    grade or upper        medium        grade quality, although it may
invest up to one-third of its total assets in bonds judged to be of
medium        grade quality if they are suitable for achieving its
investment objective. The fund's standards for high        grade, upper   
    medium        grade, and medium        grade obligations are
essentially the same as Moody's and S&P's four highest categories of Baa or
BBB and above. The fund will not invest in any bond rated lower than Baa by
Moody's or BBB by S&P, but may invest up to 20% of its total assets in
bonds not rated by either of these rating services if FMR judges them to
meet the fund's quality standards. The fund will normally invest at least
80% of its assets in municipal securities whose interest is exempt from
federal income tax.
With respect to 75% of its total assets, the fund may not purchase a
security if, as a result, more than 5% would be invested in the securities
of any one issuer.
The fund may borrow only for temporary or emergency purposes, but not in an
amount exceeding 331/3% of its total assets.
BREAKDOWN OF EXPENSES
Like all mutual funds, the fund pays fees related to its daily operations.
Expenses paid out of each class's assets are reflected in    it    's share
price or dividends; they are neither billed directly to shareholders nor
deducted from shareholder accounts.
The fund pays a MANAGEMENT FEE to FMR for managing its investments and
business affairs. The fund also pays OTHER EXPENSES   ,     which are
explained below.
FMR may, from time to time, agree to reimburse the fund for management fees
and other expenses above a specified limit. FMR retains the ability to be
repaid by the fund if expenses fall below the specified limit prior to the
end of the fiscal year. Reimbursement arrangements, which may be terminated
at any time without notice, can decrease the fund's expenses and boost its
performance.
MANAGEMENT FEE
The management fee is calculated and paid to FMR every month. The fee is
calculated by adding a group fee rate to an individual fund fee rate, and
multiplying the result by the fund's average net assets.
The group fee rate is based on the average net assets of all the mutual
funds advised by FMR. This rate cannot rise above 0.37%, and it drops as
total assets under management increase.
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, the group fee rate was
0.1482%. The individual fund fee rate is 0.25%. The total management fee
rate for the fiscal year ended 1995 was 0.40%.
OTHER EXPENSES
While the management fee is a significant component of the fund's annual
operating costs, the fund has other expenses as well.
UMB has entered into a sub-arrangement with FIIOC. FIIOC performs transfer
agency, dividend disbursing and shareholder services for the Institutional
Class shares of the fund. UMB has also entered into a sub-arrangement with
FSC. FSC calculates the NAV and dividends for the Institutional Class
shares of the fund, and maintains the fund's general accounting records.
All of the fees are paid to FIIOC and FSC by UMB, which is reimbursed by
the Institutional Class or the fund, as appropriate, for such payments.
For the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995, UMB paid FSC fees equal to
0.   03    % of the fund's average net assets for pricing and bookkeeping
services.
The Institutional Class has adopted a DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN. This
plan recognizes that FMR may use its resources, including management fees,
to pay expenses associated with the sale of Institutional Class shares.
This may include reimbursing FDC for payments to third parties, such as
banks or broker-dealers, that provide shareholder support services or
engage in the sale of Institutional Class shares. The Board of Trustees has
authorized such payments. 
The fund also pays other expenses, such as legal, audit, and custodian
fees; in some instances, proxy solicitation costs; and the compensation of
trustees who are not affiliated with Fidelity.
The fund's portfolio turnover rate for the fiscal year ended 1995 was 72%.
This rate varies from year to year.
YOUR ACCOUNT
 
 
TYPES OF ACCOUNTS
When you invest through an investment professional, your investment
professional, including a broker-dealer or financial institution, may
charge you a transaction fee with respect to the purchase and sale of fund
shares. Read your investment professional's program materials in
conjunction with this prospectus for additional service features or fees
that may apply. Certain features of the fund, such as minimum initial or
subsequent investment amounts, may be modified.
The different ways to set up (register) your account with Fidelity are
listed below.
WAYS TO SET UP YOUR ACCOUNT
INDIVIDUAL OR JOINT TENANT
FOR YOUR GENERAL INVESTMENT NEEDS 
Individual accounts are owned by one person. Joint accounts can have two or
more owners (tenants).
GIFTS OR TRANSFERS TO A MINOR (UGMA, UTMA) 
TO INVEST FOR A CHILD'S EDUCATION OR OTHER FUTURE NEEDS 
These custodial accounts provide a way to give money to a child and obtain
tax benefits. An individual can give up to $10,000 a year per child without
paying federal gift tax. Depending on state laws, you can set up a
custodial account under the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act (UGMA) or the
Uniform Transfers to Minors Act (UTMA). Contact your investment
professional.
TRUST 
FOR MONEY BEING INVESTED BY A TRUST 
The trust must be established before an account can be opened.
BUSINESS OR ORGANIZATION 
FOR INVESTMENT NEEDS OF CORPORATIONS, ASSOCIATIONS, PARTNERSHIPS, OR OTHER
GROUPS
Contact your investment professional.
HOW TO BUY SHARES
INSTITUTIONAL CLASS'S SHARE PRICE, called NAV, is calculated every business
day. Institutional Class shares are sold without a sales charge.
Shares are purchased at the next NAV calculated after your order is
received and accepted by the transfer agent. NAV is normally calculated at
4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
It is the responsibility of your investment professional to transmit your
order to buy shares to the appropriate transfer agent before 4:00 p.m.
Eastern time.
The transfer agent must receive payment within three business days after an
order for shares is placed; otherwise your purchase order may be canceled
and you could be held liable for resulting fees and/or losses.
Share certificates are not available for Institutional Class shares.
IF YOU ARE NEW TO THE FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS, complete and sign an account
application and mail it along with your check. You may also open your
account by wire as described on page . If there is no account application
accompanying this prospectus, call your investment professional or
1-800-843-3001.
IF YOU ALREADY HAVE MONEY INVESTED IN A FIDELITY ADVISOR FUND, you can:
(small solid bullet) Mail an account application with a check,
(small solid bullet) Place an order and wire money into your account, 
(small solid bullet) Open your account by exchanging from the same class of
another Fidelity Advisor fund or from another Fidelity fund, or
(small solid bullet) Contact your investment professional.
MINIMUM INVESTMENTS
TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT $2,500
   Through regular investment plans* $1,000    
TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT $250
   Through regular investment plans $100    
MINIMUM BALANCE $1,000
*AN ACCOUNT MAY BE OPENED WITH A MINIMUM OF $1,000, PROVIDED THAT A
SYSTEMATIC PAYMENT PLAN PERIODICALLY FUNDS THE ACCOUNT. FOR MORE
INFORMATION, PLEASE REFER TO PAGE .
For further information on opening an account, please consult your
investment professional or refer to the account application.
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                 <C>                                                     <C>                                                     
                    TO OPEN AN ACCOUNT                                      TO ADD TO AN ACCOUNT   
 
PHONE               (small solid bullet) Exchange from the same class of    (small solid bullet) Exchange from the same class of    
1-800-843-3001 OR 
YOUR                another Fidelity Advisor fund or from                   another Fidelity Advisor fund or from                   
INVESTMENT 
PROFESSIONAL        another Fidelity fund account with the                  another Fidelity fund account with the                  
                    same registration, including name,                      same registration, including name,                      
                    address, and taxpayer ID number.                        address, and taxpayer ID number.                        
 
</TABLE>
 
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>              <C>                                                   <C>                                                          
Mail 
(mail_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Complete and sign the account    (small solid bullet) Make your check payable to "Fidelity    
                 application. Make your check                          Advisor Municipal Bond Fund -                                
                 payable to "Fidelity Advisor Municipal                Institutional Class." Indicate your                          
                 Bond Fund - Institutional Class." Mail                fund account number on your check                            
                 to the address indicated on the                       and mail to the address printed on                           
                 application.                                          your account statement.                                      
                                                                       (small solid bullet) Exchange by mail: call                  
                                                                       1-800-843-3001 or your investment                            
                                                                       professional for instructions.                               
 
</TABLE>
 
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>          <C>                                                        <C>                                                         
In Person 
(hand_graphic)(small solid bullet) Bring your account application and   (small solid bullet) Bring your check to your investment    
             check to your investment                                   professional.                                               
             professional.                                                                                                          
 
</TABLE>
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                   <C>                                                        <C>                                     
Wire (wire_graphic)   (small solid bullet) Call 1-800-843-3001 to set up your                                            
                      account and to arrange a wire                              (small solid bullet) Wire to:           
                      transaction.                                               Banker's Trust Co.                      
                      (small solid bullet) Wire to:                              Routing # 021001033                     
                      Banker's Trust Co.                                         Fidelity DART Depository                
                      Routing # 021001033                                        Account #00159759                       
                      Fidelity DART Depository                                   FBO: (account name)                     
                      Account #00159759                                          (account number)                        
                      FBO: (account name)                                                                                
                      (account number)                                           Specify "Fidelity Advisor Municipal     
                                                                                 Bond Fund - Institutional Class" and    
                      Specify "Fidelity Advisor Municipal                        include your account number and         
                      Bond Fund - Institutional Class" and                       your name.                              
                      include your new account number                                                                    
                      and your name.                                                                                     
 
</TABLE>
 
HOW TO SELL SHARES
You can arrange to take money out of your fund account at any time by
selling (redeeming) some or all of your shares. Your shares will be sold at
the next NAV calculated after your order is received and accepted by the
transfer agent. NAV is normally calculated at 4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
TO SELL SHARES IN AN ACCOUNT, you may use any of the methods described on
these pages.
IF YOU ARE SELLING SOME BUT NOT ALL OF YOUR ACCOUNT SHARES, leave at least
$1,000 worth of shares in the account to keep it open.
TO SELL SHARES BY BANK WIRE, you will need to sign up for this service in
advance.
CERTAIN REQUESTS MUST INCLUDE A SIGNATURE GUARANTEE. It is designed to
protect you and the fund from fraud. Your request must be made in writing
and include a signature guarantee if any of the following situations apply:
(small solid bullet) You wish to redeem more than $100,000 worth of shares,
(small solid bullet) Your account registration has changed within the last
30 days,
(small solid bullet) The check is being mailed to a different address than
the one on your account (record address),
(small solid bullet) The check is being made payable to someone other than
the account owner,
(small solid bullet) The redemption proceeds are being transferred to a
Fidelity account with a different registration,
(small solid bullet) You wish to set up the bank wire feature, or
(small solid bullet) You wish to have redemption proceeds wired to a
non-predesignated bank account.
You should be able to obtain a signature guarantee from a bank, broker,
dealer, credit union (if authorized under state law), securities exchange
or association, clearing agency, or savings association. A notary public
cannot provide a signature guarantee.
SELLING SHARES IN WRITING
Write a "letter of instruction" with:
(small solid bullet) Your name,
(small solid bullet) The fund's name,
(small solid bullet) The applicable class name,
(small solid bullet) Your fund account number,
(small solid bullet) The dollar amount or number of shares to be redeemed,
and
(small solid bullet) Any other applicable requirements listed in the
following table.
Deliver your letter to your investment professional, or mail it to the
following address:
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company
P.O. Box 1182
Boston, MA 02103-1182
Unless otherwise instructed, the transfer agent will send a check to the
record address.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                       <C>                 <C>                                                     
                          ACCOUNT TYPE         SPECIAL REQUIREMENTS   
 
PHONE                     All account types   (small solid bullet) Maximum check request: $100,000.   
1-800-843-3001 OR YOUR                                                                                
INVESTMENT PROFESSIONAL                       (small solid bullet) You may exchange to the same       
                                              class of other Fidelity Advisor funds                   
                                              or to other Fidelity funds if both                      
                                              accounts are registered with the                        
                                              same name(s), address, and                              
                                              taxpayer ID number.                                     
 
</TABLE>
 
 
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                    <C>                               <C>                                                       
Mail or in Person (mail_graphic)
(hand_graphic)                         Individual, Joint Tenant,         (small solid bullet) The letter of instruction must be    
                                       Sole Proprietorship, UGMA, UTMA   signed by all persons required to                         
                                                                         sign for transactions, exactly as                         
                                                                          their names appear on the account.                        
 
                                        Trust                             (small solid bullet) The trustee must sign the letter     
                                                                         indicating capacity as trustee. If the                    
                                                                          trustee's name is not in the account                      
                                                                          registration, provide a copy of the                       
                                                                          trust document certified within the                       
                                                                          last 60 days.                                             
 
                                        Business or Organization          (small solid bullet) At least one person authorized by    
                                                                         corporate resolution to act on the                        
                                                                         account must sign the letter.                             
 
                                        Executor, Administrator,          (small solid bullet) Call 1-800-843-3001 or your          
                                        Conservator/Guardian              investment professional for                               
                                                                         instructions.                                             
 
Wire (wire_graphic)                     All account types                 (small solid bullet) You must sign up for the wire        
                                                                         feature before using it. To verify that                   
                                                                         it is in place, call 1-800-843-3001.                      
                                                                          Minimum wire: $1,000.                                     
                                                                          (small solid bullet) Your wire redemption request must    
                                                                          be received by the transfer agent                         
                                                                          before 4:00 p.m. Eastern time for                         
                                                                          money to be wired on the next                             
                                                                         business day.                                             
 
</TABLE>
 
INVESTOR SERVICES
Fidelity Advisor funds provide a variety of services to help you manage
your account.
INFORMATION SERVICES
STATEMENTS AND REPORTS that the transfer agent sends to you include the
following:
(small solid bullet) Confirmation statements (after every transaction that
affects your account balance or your account registration)
(small solid bullet) Account statements (quarterly)
(small solid bullet) Financial reports (every six months)
To reduce expenses, only one copy of most financial reports and
prospectuses will be mailed, even if you have more than one account in the
fund. Call your investment professional if you need additional copies of
financial reports and prospectuses.
TRANSACTION SERVICES
EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE. You may sell your Institutional Class shares and buy
Institutional Class shares of other Fidelity Advisor funds or shares of
other Fidelity funds by telephone or in writing.
Note that exchanges out of the fund are limited to four per calendar year,
and that they may have tax consequences for you. For details on policies
and restrictions governing exchanges, including circumstances under which a
shareholder's exchange privilege may be suspended or revoked, see "Exchange
Restrictions," page .
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC WITHDRAWAL PROGRAM lets you set up periodic
redemptions from your account. Institutional Class shares with an account
value of $10,000 or more are eligible for this program.
One easy way to pursue your financial goals is to invest money regularly.
Fidelity Advisor funds offer convenient services that let you transfer
money into your fund account, or between fund accounts, automatically.
While regular investment plans do not guarantee a profit and will not
protect you against loss in a declining market, they can be an excellent
way to invest for a home, educational expenses, and other long-term
financial goals.
REGULAR INVESTMENT PLANS
FIDELITY ADVISOR SYSTEMATIC INVESTMENT PROGRAM
TO MOVE MONEY FROM YOUR BANK ACCOUNT TO A FIDELITY ADVISOR FUND
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                   <C>                    <C>                                                                 
MINIMUM  MINIMUM                                                                                                 
INITIAL  ADDITIONAL   FREQUENCY              SETTING UP OR CHANGING                                              
$1,000  $100          Monthly, bimonthly,    (small solid bullet) For a new account, complete the appropriate    
                      quarterly,             section on the application.                                         
                      or semi-annually       (small solid bullet) For existing accounts, call your investment    
                                             professional for an application.                                    
                                             (small solid bullet) To change the amount or frequency of your      
                                             investment, contact your investment professional                    
                                             directly or call 1-800-843-3001. Call at least 10                   
                                             business days prior to your next scheduled                          
                                             investment date.                                                    
 
</TABLE>
 
   SHAREHOLDER AND ACCOUNT POLICIES    
 
 
DIVIDENDS, CAPITAL GAINS, AND TAXES
The fund distributes substantially all of its net investment income and
capital gains to shareholders each year. Income dividends are declared
daily and paid monthly. Capital gains   , if any,     are normally
distributed in February and December.
DISTRIBUTION OPTIONS
When you open an account, specify on your account application how you want
to receive your distributions. The fund offers four options:
1. REINVESTMENT OPTION. Your dividend and capital gain distributions will
be automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same class of the
fund. If you do not indicate a choice on your application, you will be
assigned this option.
2. INCOME-EARNED OPTION. Your capital gain distributions will be
automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same class of the
fund, but you will be sent a check for each dividend distribution.
3. CASH OPTION. You will be sent a check for your dividend and capital gain
distributions.
4. DIRECTED DIVIDENDS(registered trademark) PROGRAM. Your dividend and
capital gain distributions will be automatically invested in the same class
of shares of another identically registered Fidelity Advisor fund.
If you select distribution option 2 or 3 and the U.S. Postal Service cannot
deliver your checks, or if your checks remain uncashed for six months,
those checks will be reinvested in your account at the current NAV and your
election may be converted to the Reinvestment Option.    To change your
distribution option, call 1-800-843-3001 or your investment
professional.    
Dividends will be reinvested at the    Institutional C    lass's NAV on the
last day of the month. Capital gain distributions will be reinvested at the
NAV as of the date the class deducts the distribution from its NAV. The
mailing of distribution checks will begin within seven days, or longer for
a December ex-dividend date.
TAXES
As with any investment, you should consider how an investment in a tax-free
fund could affect you. Below are some of the fund's tax implications.
TAXES ON DISTRIBUTIONS. Interest income that the fund earns is distributed
to shareholders as income dividends. Interest that is federally tax-free
remains tax-free when it is distributed. 
However, gain on the sale of tax-free bonds results in taxable
distributions. Short-term capital gains and a portion of the gain on bonds
purchased at a discount are taxed as dividends. Long-term capital gain
distributions are taxed as long-term capital gains. These distributions are
taxable when they are paid, whether you take them in cash or reinvest them.
However, distributions declared in December and paid in January are taxable
as if they were paid on December 31.
   Every January    , the transfer agent will send you and the IRS a
statement showing the tax status of the distributions paid to you in the
previous year.
The interest from some municipal securities is subject to the federal
alternative minimum tax. The fund may invest up to 100% of its assets in
these securities. Individuals who are subject to the tax must report this
interest on their tax returns.
A portion of the fund's dividends may be free from state or local taxes.
Income from investments in your state are often tax-free to you. Each year,
the transfer agent will send you a breakdown of your fund's income from
each state to help you calculate your taxes.
During the fiscal year ended 1995, 100% of the fund's income dividends was
free from federal income tax, and 0% of the fund's income dividends was
subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
TAXES ON TRANSACTIONS. Your redemptions - including exchanges - are subject
to capital gains tax. A capital gain or loss is the difference between the
cost of your shares and the price you receive when you sell them. 
Whenever you sell shares of the fund, the transfer agent will send you a
confirmation statement showing how many shares you sold and at what price. 
You will also receive a consolidated transaction statement at least
quarterly. However, it is up to you or your tax preparer to determine
whether this sale resulted in a capital gain and, if so, the amount of tax
to be paid. BE SURE TO KEEP YOUR REGULAR ACCOUNT STATEMENTS; the
information they contain will be essential in calculating the amount of
your capital gains.
"BUYING A DIVIDEND." If you buy shares just before a class deducts a
capital gain distribution from its NAV, you will pay the full price for the
shares and then receive a portion of the price back in the form of a
taxable distribution.
TRANSACTION DETAILS
THE FUND IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS each day the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
is open.    Institutional C    lass's NAV is normally calculated as of the
close of business of the NYSE, normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time.
A CLASS'S NAV is the value of a single share. The NAV of each class is
computed by adding that class's pro rata share of the value of the fund's
investments, cash, and other assets, subtracting that class's pro rata
share of the value of the fund's liabilities, subtracting the liabilities
allocated to that class, and dividing the result by the number of shares of
that class that are outstanding.
The fund's assets are valued primarily on the basis of market quotations,
if available. Since market quotations are often unavailable, assets are
usually valued by a method that the Board of Trustees believes accurately
reflects fair value.
THE OFFERING PRICE (price to buy one share) and REDEMPTION PRICE (price to
sell one share) are the Institutional Class's NAV. 
WHEN YOU SIGN YOUR ACCOUNT APPLICATION, you will be asked to certify that
your social security or taxpayer identification number is correct and that
you are not subject to 31% backup withholding for failing to report income
to the IRS. If you violate IRS regulations, the IRS can require the fund to
withhold 31% of your taxable distributions and redemptions.
YOU MAY INITIATE MANY TRANSACTIONS BY TELEPHONE. Fidelity and the transfer
agent may only be liable for losses resulting from unauthorized
transactions if they do not follow reasonable procedures designed to verify
the identity of the caller. Fidelity and the transfer agent will request
personalized security codes or other information, and may also record
calls. You should verify the accuracy of the confirmation statements
immediately after receipt. If you do not want the ability to redeem and
exchange by telephone, call the transfer agent for instructions. Additional
documentation may be required from corporations, associations, and certain
fiduciaries.
IF YOU ARE UNABLE TO REACH THE TRANSFER AGENT BY PHONE (for example, during
periods of unusual market activity), consider placing your order by mail. 
THE FUND RESERVES THE RIGHT TO SUSPEND THE OFFERING OF SHARES for a period
of time. The fund also reserves the right to reject any specific purchase
order, including certain purchases by exchange. See "Exchange Restrictions"
on page . Purchase orders may be refused if, in FMR's opinion, they would
disrupt management of the fund.
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO BUY SHARES, your shares will be purchased at the
next NAV calculated after your order is received and accepted by the
transfer agent. Note the following: 
(small solid bullet) All of your purchases must be made in U.S. dollars and
checks must be drawn on U.S. banks. 
(small solid bullet) The fund does not accept cash.
(small solid bullet) When making a purchase with more than one check, each
check must have a value of at least $50.
(small solid bullet) The fund reserves the right to limit the number of
checks processed at one time.
(small solid bullet) If your check does not clear, your purchase will be
canceled and you could be liable for any losses or fees the fund or the
transfer agent has incurred.
(small solid bullet) Automated Purchase Orders: You begin to earn dividends
as of the day your funds are received.
(small solid bullet) Other Purchases: You begin to earn dividends as of the
first business day following the day your funds are received.
AUTOMATED PURCHASE ORDERS.    Institutional Class shares     can be
purchased or sold through investment professionals utilizing an automated
order placement and settlement system that guarantees payment for orders on
a specified date.
CONFIRMED PURCHASES. Certain financial institutions that meet FDC's
creditworthiness criteria may enter confirmed purchase orders on behalf of
customers by phone, with payment to follow no later than close of business
on the next business day. If payment is not received by the next business
day, the order will be canceled and the financial institution will be
liable for any losses.
TO AVOID THE COLLECTION PERIOD associated with check purchases, consider
buying shares by bank wire, U.S. Postal money order, U.S. Treasury check,
or Federal Reserve check.
WHEN YOU PLACE AN ORDER TO SELL SHARES, your shares will be sold at the
next NAV calculated after your order is received and accepted by the
transfer agent. Note the following: 
(small solid bullet) Normally, redemption proceeds will be mailed to you on
the next business day, but if making immediate payment could adversely
affect the fund, it may take up to seven days to pay you. 
(small solid bullet) Shares will earn dividends through the date of
redemption; however, shares redeemed on a Friday or prior to a holiday will
continue to earn dividends until the next business day.
(small solid bullet) The fund may hold payment on redemptions until it is
reasonably satisfied that investments made by check have been collected,
which can take up to seven business days.
(small solid bullet) Redemptions may be suspended or payment dates
postponed when the NYSE is closed (other than weekends or holidays), when
trading on the NYSE is restricted, or as permitted by the SEC.
THE TRANSFER AGENT RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DEDUCT AN ANNUAL MAINTENANCE FEE
of $12.00 from accounts with a value of less than $2,500, subject to an
annual maximum charge of $60.00 per shareholder. Accounts opened after
September 30 will not be subject to the fee for that year. The fee, which
is payable to the transfer agent, is designed to offset in part the
relatively higher costs of servicing smaller accounts. The fee will not be
deducted from retirement accounts (except non-prototype retirement
accounts), accounts using a systematic investment program, certain (Network
Level I and III) accounts which are maintained through National Securities
Clearing Corporation (NSCC), or if total assets in Fidelity mutual funds
exceed $50,000. Eligibility for the $50,000 waiver is determined by
aggregating Fidelity mutual fund accounts (excluding contractual plans)
maintained (i) by FIIOC, (ii) by State Street Bank & Trust Company, and
(iii) through NSCC; provided those accounts are registered under the same
primary social security number.
IF YOUR ACCOUNT BALANCE FALLS BELOW $1,000, you will be given 30 days'
notice to reestablish the minimum balance. If you do not increase your
balance, the transfer agent reserves the right to close your account and
send the proceeds to you. Your shares will be redeemed at the NAV on the
day your account is closed. 
THE TRANSFER AGENT MAY CHARGE A FEE FOR SPECIAL SERVICES, such as providing
historical account documents, that are beyond the normal scope of its
services. 
FDC will, at its expense, provide promotional incentives such as sales
contests and luxury trips to investment professionals who support the sale
of shares of the funds. In some instances, these incentives will be offered
only to certain types of investment professionals, such as bank-affiliated
or non-bank affiliated broker-dealers, or to investment professionals whose
representatives provide services in connection with the sale or expected
sale of significant amounts of shares.
EXCHANGE RESTRICTIONS
As a shareholder, you have the privilege of exchanging your Institutional
Class shares for Institutional Class shares of other Fidelity Advisor funds
or for shares of other Fidelity funds. However, you should note the
following:
(small solid bullet) The fund you are exchanging into must be registered
for sale in your state.
(small solid bullet) You may only exchange between accounts that are
registered in the same name, address, and taxpayer identification number.
(small solid bullet) Before exchanging into a fund, read its prospectus.
(small solid bullet) If you exchange into a fund with a sales charge, you
pay the difference between that fund's sales charge and any sales charge
you may have previously paid in connection with the shares you are
exchanging. For example, if you had already paid a sales charge of 2% on
your shares and you exchange them into a fund with a 3% sales charge, you
would pay an additional 1% sales charge.
(small solid bullet) Exchanges may have tax consequences for you.
(small solid bullet) Because excessive trading can hurt fund performance
and shareholders, the fund reserves the right to temporarily or permanently
terminate the exchange privilege of any investor who makes more than four
exchanges out of the fund per calendar year. Accounts under common
ownership or control, including accounts with the same taxpayer
identification number, will be counted together for purposes of the four
exchange limit.
(small solid bullet) The fund reserves the right to refuse exchange
purchases by any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be
unable to invest the money effectively in accordance with its investment
objective and policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely
affected.
(small solid bullet) Your exchanges may be restricted or refused if the
fund receives or anticipates simultaneous orders affecting significant
portions of the fund's assets. In particular, a pattern of exchanges that
coincides with a "market timing" strategy may be disruptive to the fund.
Although the fund will attempt to give you prior notice whenever it is
reasonably able to do so, it may impose these restrictions at any time. The
fund reserves the right to terminate or modify the exchange privilege in
the future. 
No dealer, sales representative, or any other person has been authorized to
give any information or to make any representations, other than those
contained in this Prospectus and in the related SAI, in connection with the
offer contained in this Prospectus. If given or made, such other
information or representations must not be relied upon as having been
authorized by the fund or FDC. This Prospectus and the related SAI do not
constitute an offer by the fund or by FDC to sell or to buy shares of the
fund to any person to whom it is unlawful to make such offer.
 
 
 
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND: INSTITUTIONAL CLASS 
 
CROSS REFERENCE SHEET
FORM N-1A         
 
ITEM NUMBER   STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION SECTION   
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>     <C>       <C>                            <C>                                                
10,11             ............................   Cover Page; Table of Contents                      
 
12                ............................   *                                                  
 
13      a - c     ............................   Investment Policies and Limitations                
 
        d         ............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
14      a - c     ............................   Trustees and Officers                              
 
15      a         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        b - c     ............................   Description of the Trust; Trustees and Officers    
 
16      a(i)      ............................   FMR                                                
 
         (ii)     ............................   Trustees and Officers                              
 
        (iii),b   ............................   Management Contract;                               
 
        c         ............................   Management Contract                                
 
        d         ............................   *                                                  
 
        e         ............................   *                                                  
 
        f         ............................   Distribution and Service Plans                     
 
        g         ............................   *                                                  
 
        h         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        i         ............................   Contracts with FMR Affiliates                      
 
17      a,b,c,d   ............................   Portfolio Transactions                             
 
        e         ............................   *                                                  
 
18      a         ............................   Description of the Trust                           
 
        b         ............................   *                                                  
 
19      a         ............................   Additional Purchase, Exchange and Redemption       
                                                 Information                                        
 
        b         ............................   Additional Purchase, Exchange and Redemption       
                                                 Information; Valuation                             
 
        c         ............................   *                                                  
 
20                ............................   Distributions and Taxes                            
 
21      a, b      ............................   Contracts with FMR Affiliates; Distribution and    
                                                 Service Plans                                      
 
        c         ............................   *                                                  
 
22                ............................   Performance; Appendix                              
 
23                ............................   Financial Statements                               
 
</TABLE>
 
* Not Applicable
 
FIDELITY MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
A CLASS OF FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
JUNE 30, 1996
This Statement of Additional Information (SAI) is not a prospectus but
should be read in conjunction with the current Fidelity Municipal Bond Fund
   ("Initial Class")     Prospectus (dated June 30, 1996). Initial Class
shares are available only to current Initial Class shareholders. Please
retain this document for future reference. The fund's financial statements
and financial highlights, included in the Annual Report for the fiscal year
ended December 31, 1995, are incorporated herein by reference. To obtain an
additional copy of this SAI, the Prospectus, or the Annual Report, please
call Fidelity Distributors Corporation, 82 Devonshire Street, Boston,
Massachusetts 02109.
   NATIONWIDE    1-800-544-8888
TABLE OF CONTENTS                                           PAGE   
 
                                                                   
 
Investment Policies and Limitations                                
 
Portfolio Transactions                                             
 
Valuation                                                          
 
Performance                                                        
 
Additional Purchase, Exchange, and Redemption Information          
 
Distributions and Taxes                                            
 
FMR                                                                
 
Trustees and Officers                                              
 
Management Contract                                                
 
Contracts with FMR Affiliates                                      
 
Distribution and Service Plan                                      
 
Description of the Trust                                           
 
Financial Statements                                               
 
Appendix                                                           
 
INVESTMENT ADVISER
Fidelity Management & Research Company (FMR)
DISTRIBUTOR
Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC)
TRANSFER AGENT 
UMB Bank, n.a. (UMB)
MUN-ptb-0696
INVESTMENT POLICIES AND LIMITATIONS
The following policies and limitations supplement those set forth in the
Prospectus. Unless otherwise noted, whenever an investment policy or
limitation states a maximum percentage of the fund's assets that may be
invested in any security or other asset, or sets forth a policy regarding
quality standards, such standard or percentage limitation will be
determined immediately after and as a result of the fund's acquisition of
such security or other asset. Accordingly, any subsequent change in values,
net assets, or other circumstances will not be considered when determining
whether the investment complies with the fund's investment policies and
limitations.
The fund's fundamental investment policies and limitations cannot be
changed without approval by a "majority of the outstanding voting
securities" (as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940 (1940 Act))
of the fund. However, except for the fundamental investment limitations
listed below, the investment policies and limitations described in this SAI
are not fundamental and may be changed without shareholder approval. THE
FOLLOWING ARE THE FUND'S FUNDAMENTAL INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS SET FORTH IN
THEIR ENTIRETY. THE FUND MAY NOT:
(1) with respect to 75% of the fund's total assets, purchase the securities
of any issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
government or any of its agencies or instrumentalities) if, as a result,
(a) more than 5% of the fund's total assets would be invested in the
securities of that issuer, or (b) the fund would hold more than 10% of the
outstanding voting securities of that issuer;
(2) issue senior securities, except as permitted under the Investment
Company Act of 1940;
(3) borrow money, except that the fund may borrow money for temporary or
emergency purposes (not for leveraging or investment) in an amount not
exceeding 33 1/3% of its total assets (including the amount borrowed) less
liabilities (other than borrowings). Any borrowings that come to exceed
this amount will be reduced within three days (not including Sundays and
holidays) to the extent necessary to comply with the 33 1/3% limitation;
(4) underwrite securities issued by others, except to the extent that the
fund may be considered an underwriter within the meaning of the Securities
Act of 1933 in the disposition of restricted securities;
(5) purchase the securities of any issuer (other than securities issued or
guaranteed by the U.S. government or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities, or tax-exempt obligations issued or guaranteed by a U.S.
territory or possession or a state or local government, or a political
subdivision of any of the foregoing) if, as a result, more than 25% of the
fund's total assets would be invested in securities of companies whose
principal business activities are in the same industry;
(6) purchase or sell real estate unless acquired as a result of ownership
of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent the fund
from investing in securities or other instruments backed by real estate or
securities of companies engaged in the real estate business);
(7) purchase or sell physical commodities unless acquired as a result of
ownership of securities or other instruments (but this shall not prevent
the fund from purchasing or selling options and futures contracts or from
investing in securities or other instruments backed by physical
commodities); or
(8) lend any security or make any other loan if, as a result, more than 33
1/3% of its total assets would be lent to other parties, but this
limitation does not apply to purchases of debt securities or to repurchase
agreements.
THE FOLLOWING INVESTMENT LIMITATIONS ARE NOT FUNDAMENTAL AND MAY BE CHANGED
WITHOUT SHAREHOLDER APPROVAL.
(i)  The fund does not currently intend to sell securities short, unless it
owns or has the right to obtain securities equivalent in kind and amount to
the securities sold short, and provided that transactions in futures
contracts and options are not deemed to constitute selling securities
short.
(ii)  The fund does not currently intend to purchase securities on margin,
except that the fund may obtain such short-term credits as are necessary
for the clearance of transactions, and provided that margin payments in
connection with futures contracts and options on futures contracts shall
not constitute purchasing securities on margin.
(iii) The fund may borrow money only (a) from a bank or from a registered
investment company or portfolio for which FMR or an affiliate serves as
investment adviser, or (b) by engaging in reverse repurchase agreements
with any party (reverse repurchase agreements are treated as borrowings for
purposes of fundamental investment limitation (3)). The fund will not
purchase any security while borrowings representing more than 5% of its
total assets are outstanding. The fund will not borrow from other funds
advised by FMR or its affiliates if total outstanding borrowings
immediately after such borrowing would exceed 15% of the fund's total
assets.
(iv) The fund does not currently intend to purchase any security if, as a
result, more than 10% of its net assets would be invested in securities
that are deemed to be illiquid because they are subject to legal or
contractual restrictions on resale or because they cannot be sold or
disposed of in the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices
at which they are valued.
(v) The fund does not currently intend to engage in repurchase agreements
or make loans, but this limitation does not apply to purchases of debt
securities.
(vi) The fund does not currently intend to (a) purchase securities of other
investment companies, except in the open market where no commission except
the ordinary broker's commission is paid, or (b) purchase or retain
securities issued by other open-end investment companies. Limitations (a)
and (b) do not apply to securities received as dividends, through offers of
exchange, or as a result of a reorganization, consolidation, or merger.
(vii) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer (other than securities issued or guaranteed by domestic or foreign
governments or political subdivisions thereof) if, as a result, more than
5% of its total assets would be invested in the securities of business
enterprises that, including predecessors, have a record of less than three
years of continuous operation.
(viii) The fund does not currently intend to invest in oil, gas, or other
mineral exploration or development programs or leases.
(ix) The fund does not currently intend to purchase the securities of any
issuer if those officers and Trustees of the trust and those officers and
directors of FMR who individually own more than 1/2 of 1% of the securities
of such issuer together own more than 5% of such issuer's securities.
For purposes of limitations (1) and (5), FMR identifies the issuer of a
security depending on its terms and conditions. In identifying the issuer,
FMR will consider the entity or entities responsible for payment of
interest and repayment of principal and the source of such payments; the
way in which assets and revenues of an issuing political subdivision are
separated from those of other political entities; and whether a
governmental body is guaranteeing the security.
For purposes of limitation (vii), pass-through entities and other special
purpose vehicles or pools of financial assets, such as issuers of
asset-backed securities or investment companies, are not considered
"business enterprises."
For the fund's limitations on futures and options transactions, see the
section entitled "Futures and Options" beginning on page .
AFFILIATED BANK TRANSACTIONS. The fund may engage in transactions with
financial institutions that are, or may be considered to be, "affiliated
persons" of the fund under the 1940 Act. These transactions may include
repurchase agreements with custodian banks; short-term obligations of, and
repurchase agreements with, the 50 largest U.S. banks (measured by
deposits); municipal securities; U.S. Government securities with affiliated
financial institutions that are primary dealers in these securities;
short-term currency transactions; and short-term borrowings. In accordance
with exemptive orders issued by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), the Board of Trustees has established and periodically reviews
procedures applicable to transactions involving affiliated financial
institutions.
DELAYED-DELIVERY TRANSACTIONS. The fund may buy and sell securities on a
delayed-delivery or when-issued basis. These transactions involve a
commitment by the fund to purchase or sell specific securities at a
predetermined price or yield, with payment and delivery taking place after
the customary settlement period for that type of security. Typically, no
interest accrues to the purchaser until the security is delivered. The fund
may receive fees for entering into delayed-delivery transactions.
When purchasing securities on a delayed-delivery basis, the fund assumes
the rights and risks of ownership, including the risk of price and yield
fluctuations. Because the fund is not required to pay for securities until
the delivery date, these risks are in addition to the risks associated with
the fund's other investments. If the fund remains substantially fully
invested at a time when delayed-delivery purchases are outstanding, the
delayed-delivery purchases may result in a form of leverage. When
delayed-delivery purchases are outstanding, the fund will set aside
appropriate liquid assets in a segregated custodial account to cover its
purchase obligations. When the fund has sold a security on a
delayed-delivery basis, the fund does not participate in further gains or
losses with respect to the security. If the other party to a
delayed-delivery transaction fails to deliver or pay for the securities,
the fund could miss a favorable price or yield opportunity, or could suffer
a loss.
The fund may renegotiate delayed-delivery transactions after they are
entered into, and may sell underlying securities before they are delivered,
which may result in capital gains or losses. 
FEDERALLY TAXABLE OBLIGATIONS. Under normal conditions, the fund does not
intend to invest in securities whose interest is federally taxable.
However, from time to time on a temporary basis, the fund may invest a
portion of its assets in fixed-income obligations whose interest is subject
to federal income tax.
Should the fund invest in federally taxable obligations, it would purchase
securities that in FMR's judgment are of high quality. These would include
obligations issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government or its agencies or
instrumentalities; obligations of domestic banks; and repurchase
agreements. The fund's standards for high-quality, taxable obligations are
essentially the same as those described by Moody's Investors Service, Inc.
(Moody's) in rating corporate obligations within its two highest ratings of
Prime-1 and Prime-2, and those described by Standard & Poor's Corporation
(S&P) in rating corporate obligations within its two highest ratings of A-1
and A-2.
Proposals to restrict or eliminate the federal income tax exemption for
interest on municipal obligations are introduced before Congress from time
to time. Proposals also may be introduced before state legislatures that
would affect the state tax treatment of the fund's distributions. If such
proposals were enacted, the availability of municipal obligations and the
value of the fund's holdings would be affected and the Trustees would
reevaluate the fund's investment objective and policies. 
FUTURES AND OPTIONS. The following sections pertain to futures and options:
Asset Coverage for Futures and Options Positions, Combined Positions,
Correlation of Price Changes, Futures Contracts, Futures Margin Payments,
Limitations on Futures and Options Transactions, Liquidity of Options and
Futures Contracts, OTC Options, Purchasing Put and Call Options, and
Writing Put and Call Options.
ASSET COVERAGE FOR FUTURES AND OPTIONS POSITIONS. The fund will comply with
guidelines established by the SEC with respect to coverage of options and
futures strategies by mutual funds, and   ,     if the guidelines so
require   ,     will set aside appropriate liquid assets in a segregated
custodial account in the amount prescribed. Securities held in a segregated
account cannot be sold while the futures or option strategy is outstanding,
unless they are replaced with other suitable assets. As a result, there is
a possibility that segregation of a large percentage of the fund's assets
could impede portfolio management or the fund's ability to meet redemption
requests or other current obligations.
COMBINED POSITIONS. The fund may purchase and write options in combination
with each other, or in combination with futures or forward contracts, to
adjust the risk and return characteristics of the overall position. For
example, the fund may purchase a put option and write a call option on the
same underlying instrument, in order to construct a combined position whose
risk and return characteristics are similar to selling a futures contract.
Another possible combined position would involve writing a call option at
one strike price and buying a call option at a lower price, in order to
reduce the risk of the written call option in the event of a substantial
price increase. Because combined options positions involve multiple trades,
they result in higher transaction costs and may be more difficult to open
and close out.
CORRELATION OF PRICE CHANGES. Because there are a limited number of types
of exchange-traded options and futures contracts, it is likely that the
standardized contracts available will not match the fund's current or
anticipated investments exactly. The fund may invest in options and futures
contracts based on securities with different issuers, maturities, or other
characteristics from the securities in which it typically invests, which
involves a risk that the options or futures position will not track the
performance of the fund's other investments.
Options and futures prices can also diverge from the prices of their
underlying instruments, even if the underlying instruments match the fund's
investments well. Options and futures prices are affected by such factors
as current and anticipated short-term interest rates, changes in volatility
of the underlying instrument, and the time remaining until expiration of
the contract, which may not affect security prices the same way. Imperfect
correlation may also result from differing levels of demand in the options
and futures markets and the securities markets, from structural differences
in how options and futures and securities are traded, or from imposition of
daily price fluctuation limits or trading halts. The fund may purchase or
sell options and futures contracts with a greater or lesser value than the
securities it wishes to hedge or intends to purchase in order to attempt to
compensate for differences in volatility between the contract and the
securities, although this may not be successful in all cases. If price
changes in the fund's options or futures positions are poorly correlated
with its other investments, the positions may fail to produce anticipated
gains or result in losses that are not offset by gains in other
investments.
FUTURES CONTRACTS. When the fund purchases a futures contract, it agrees to
purchase a specified underlying instrument at a specified future date. When
the fund sells a futures contract, it agrees to sell the underlying
instrument at a specified future date. The price at which the purchase and
sale will take place is fixed when the fund enters into the contract. Some
currently available futures contracts are based on specific securities,
such as U.S. Treasury bonds or notes, and some are based on indices of
securities prices, such as the Bond Buyer Municipal Bond Index. Futures can
be held until their delivery dates, or can be closed out before then if a
liquid secondary market is available.
The value of a futures contract tends to increase and decrease in tandem
with the value of its underlying instrument. Therefore, purchasing futures
contracts will tend to increase the fund's exposure to positive and
negative price fluctuations in the underlying instrument, much as if it had
purchased the underlying instrument directly. When the fund sells a futures
contract, by contrast, the value of its futures position will tend to move
in a direction contrary to the market. Selling futures contracts,
therefore, will tend to offset both positive and negative market price
changes, much as if the underlying instrument had been sold.
FUTURES MARGIN PAYMENTS. The purchaser or seller of a futures contract is
not required to deliver or pay for the underlying instrument unless the
contract is held until the delivery date. However, both the purchaser and
seller are required to deposit "initial margin" with a futures broker,
known as a futures commission merchant (FCM), when the contract is entered
into. Initial margin deposits are typically equal to a percentage of the
contract's value. If the value of either party's position declines, that
party will be required to make additional "variation margin" payments to
settle the change in value on a daily basis. The party that has a gain may
be entitled to receive all or a portion of this amount. Initial and
variation margin payments do not constitute purchasing securities on margin
for purposes of the fund's investment limitations. In the event of the
bankruptcy of an FCM that holds margin on behalf of the fund, the fund may
be entitled to return of margin owed to it only in proportion to the amount
received by the FCM's other customers, potentially resulting in losses to
the fund.
LIMITATIONS ON FUTURES AND OPTIONS TRANSACTIONS. The fund has filed a
notice of eligibility for exclusion from the definition of the term
"commodity pool operator" with the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) and the National Futures Association, which regulate trading in the
futures markets. The fund intends to comply with Rule 4.5 under the
Commodity Exchange Act, which limits the extent to which the fund can
commit assets to initial margin deposits and option premiums.
In addition, the fund will not: (a) sell futures contracts, purchase put
options, or write call options if, as a result, more than 25% of the fund's
total assets would be hedged with futures and options under normal
conditions; (b) purchase futures contracts or write put options if, as a
result, the fund's total obligations upon settlement or exercise of
purchased futures contracts and written put options would exceed 25% of its
total assets; or (c) purchase call options if, as a result, the current
value of option premiums for call options purchased by the fund would
exceed 5% of the fund's total assets. These limitations do not apply to
options attached to or acquired or traded together with their underlying
securities, and do not apply to securities that incorporate features
similar to options.
The above limitations on the fund's investments in futures contracts and
options, and the fund's policies regarding futures contracts and options
discussed elsewhere in this Statement of Additional Information are not
fundamental policies and may be changed as regulatory agencies permit.
LIQUIDITY OF OPTIONS AND FUTURES CONTRACTS. There is no assurance a liquid
secondary market will exist for any particular options or futures contract
at any particular time. Options may have relatively low trading volume and
liquidity if their strike prices are not close to the underlying
instrument's current price. In addition, exchanges may establish daily
price fluctuation limits for options and futures contracts, and may halt
trading if a contract's price moves upward or downward more than the limit
in a given day. On volatile trading days when the price fluctuation limit
is reached or a trading halt is imposed, it may be impossible for the fund
to enter into new positions or close out existing positions. If the
secondary market for a contract is not liquid because of price fluctuation
limits or otherwise, it could prevent prompt liquidation of unfavorable
positions, and potentially could require the fund to continue to hold a
position until delivery or expiration regardless of changes in its value.
As a result, the fund's access to other assets held to cover its options or
futures positions could also be impaired.
OTC OPTIONS. Unlike exchange-traded options, which are standardized with
respect to the underlying instrument, expiration date, contract size, and
strike price, the terms of over-the-counter (OTC) options (options not
traded on exchanges) generally are established through negotiation with the
other party to the option contract. While this type of arrangement allows
the fund greater flexibility to tailor an option to its needs, OTC options
generally involve greater credit risk than exchange-traded options, which
are guaranteed by the clearing organization of the exchanges where they are
traded.
PURCHASING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. By purchasing a put option, the fund
obtains the right (but not the obligation) to sell the option's underlying
instrument at a fixed strike price. In return for this right, the fund pays
the current market price for the option (known as the option premium).
Options have various types of underlying instruments, including specific
securities, indices of securities prices, and futures contracts. The fund
may terminate its position in a put option it has purchased by allowing it
to expire or by exercising the option. If the option is allowed to expire,
the fund will lose the entire premium it paid. If the fund exercises the
option, it completes the sale of the underlying instrument at the strike
price. The fund may also terminate a put option position by closing it out
in the secondary market at its current price, if a liquid secondary market
exists.
The buyer of a typical put option can expect to realize a gain if security
prices fall substantially. However, if the underlying instrument's price
does not fall enough to offset the cost of purchasing the option, a put
buyer can expect to suffer a loss (limited to the amount of the premium
paid, plus related transaction costs).
The features of call options are essentially the same as those of put
options, except that the purchaser of a call option obtains the right to
purchase, rather than sell, the underlying instrument at the option's
strike price. A call buyer typically attempts to participate in potential
price increases of the underlying instrument with risk limited to the cost
of the option if security prices fall. At the same time, the buyer can
expect to suffer a loss if security prices do not rise sufficiently to
offset the cost of the option.
WRITING PUT AND CALL OPTIONS. When the fund writes a put option, it takes
the opposite side of the transaction from the option's purchaser. In return
for receipt of the premium, the fund assumes the obligation to pay the
strike price for the option's underlying instrument if the other party to
the option chooses to exercise it. When writing an option on a futures
contract, the fund will be required to make margin payments to an FCM as
described above for futures contracts. The fund may seek to terminate its
position in a put option it writes before exercise by closing out the
option in the secondary market at its current price. If the secondary
market is not liquid for a put option the fund has written, however, the
fund must continue to be prepared to pay the strike price while the option
is outstanding, regardless of price changes, and must continue to set aside
assets to cover its position.
If security prices rise, a put writer would generally expect to profit,
although its gain would be limited to the amount of the premium it
received. If security prices remain the same over time, it is likely that
the writer will also profit, because it should be able to close out the
option at a lower price. If security prices fall, the put writer would
expect to suffer a loss. This loss should be less than the loss from
purchasing the underlying instrument directly, however, because the premium
received for writing the option should mitigate the effects of the decline.
Writing a call option obligates the fund to sell or deliver the option's
underlying instrument, in return for the strike price, upon exercise of the
option. The characteristics of writing call options are similar to those of
writing put options, except that writing calls generally is a profitable
strategy if prices remain the same or fall. Through receipt of the option
premium, a call writer mitigates the effects of a price decline. At the
same time, because a call writer must be prepared to deliver the underlying
instrument in return for the strike price, even if its current value is
greater, a call writer gives up some ability to participate in security
price increases.
ILLIQUID INVESTMENTS are investments that cannot be sold or disposed of in
the ordinary course of business at approximately the prices at which they
are valued. Under the supervision of the Board of Trustees, FMR determines
the liquidity of the fund's investments and, through reports from FMR, the
Board monitors investments in illiquid instruments. In determining the
liquidity of the fund's investments, FMR may consider various factors,
including (1) the frequency of trades and quotations, (2) the number of
dealers and prospective purchasers in the marketplace, (3) dealer
undertakings to make a market, (4) the nature of the security (including
any demand or tender features), and (5) the nature of the marketplace for
trades (including the ability to assign or offset the fund's rights and
obligations relating to the investment).
Investments currently considered by the fund to be illiquid include
over-the-counter options. Also, FMR may determine some restricted
securities and municipal lease obligations to be illiquid. However, with
respect to over-the-counter options the fund writes, all or a portion of
the value of the underlying instrument may be illiquid depending on the
assets held to cover the option and the nature and terms of any agreement
the fund may have to close out the option before expiration.
In the absence of market quotations, illiquid investments are priced at
fair value as determined in good faith by a committee appointed by the
Board of Trustees. If through a change in values, net assets, or other
circumstances, the fund were in a position where more than 10% of its net
assets was invested in illiquid securities, it would seek to take
appropriate steps to protect liquidity.
INDEXED SECURITIES. The fund may purchase securities whose prices are
indexed to the prices of other securities, securities indices, or other
financial indicators. Indexed securities typically, but not always, are
debt securities or deposits whose value at maturity or coupon rate is
determined by reference to a specific instrument or statistic. Indexed
securities may have principal payments as well as coupon payments that
depend on the performance of one or more interest rates. Their coupon rates
or principal payments may change by several percentage points for every 1%
interest rate change. One example of indexed securities is inverse
floaters.
The performance of indexed securities depends to a great extent on the
performance of the security or other instrument to which they are indexed,
and may also be influenced by interest rate changes. At the same time,
indexed securities are subject to the credit risks associated with the
issuer of the security, and their values may decline substantially if the
issuer's creditworthiness deteriorates. Indexed securities may be more
volatile than the underlying instruments.
INTERFUND BORROWING AND LENDING PROGRAM. Pursuant to an exemptive order
issued by the SEC, the fund has received permission to lend money to, and
borrow money from, other funds advised by FMR or its affiliates, but it
currently intends to participate in this program only as a borrower.
Interfund borrowings normally extend overnight but can have a maximum
duration of seven days. A fund will borrow through the program only when
the costs are equal to or lower than the costs of bank loans. Loans may be
called on one day's notice, and a fund may have to borrow from a bank at a
higher interest rate if an interfund loan is called or not renewed. 
INVERSE FLOATERS have variable interest rates that typically move in the
opposite direction from prevailing short-term interest rate levels - rising
when prevailing short-term interest rates fall, and vice versa. This
interest rate feature can make the prices of inverse floaters considerably
more volatile than bonds with comparable maturities.
MUNICIPAL LEASES and participation interests therein may take the form of a
lease, an installment purchase, or a conditional sale contract and are
issued by state and local governments and authorities to acquire land or a
wide variety of equipment and facilities. Generally, the fund will not hold
such obligations directly as a lessor of the property, but will purchase a
participation interest in a municipal obligation from a bank or other third
party. A participation interest gives the fund a specified, undivided
interest in the obligation in proportion to its purchased interest in the
total amount of the obligation.
Municipal leases frequently have risks distinct from those associated with
general obligation or revenue bonds. State constitutions and statutes set
forth requirements that states or municipalities must meet to incur debt.
These may include voter referenda, interest rate limits, or public sale
requirements. Leases, installment purchases, or conditional sale contracts
(which normally provide for title to the leased asset to pass to the
governmental issuer) have evolved as a means for governmental issuers to
acquire property and equipment without meeting their constitutional and
statutory requirements for the issuance of debt. Many leases and contracts
include "non-appropriation clauses" providing that the governmental issuer
has no obligation to make future payments under the lease or contract
unless money is appropriated for such purposes by the appropriate
legislative body on a yearly or other periodic basis. Non-appropriation
clauses free the issuer from debt issuance limitations. 
MUNICIPAL MARKET DISRUPTION RISK. The value of municipal securities may be
affected by uncertainties in the municipal market related to legislation or
litigation involving the taxation of municipal securities or the rights of
municipal securities holders in the event of a bankruptcy. Municipal
bankruptcies are relatively rare, and certain provisions of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code governing such bankruptcies are unclear and remain
untested. Further, the application of state law to municipal issuers could
produce varying results among the states or among municipal securities
issuers within a state. These legal uncertainties could affect the
municipal securities market generally, certain specific segments of the
market, or the relative credit quality of particular securities. Any of
these effects could have a significant impact on the prices of some or all
of the municipal securities held by a fund.
MUNICIPAL SECTORS:
ELECTRIC UTILITIES INDUSTRY. The electric utilities industry has been
experiencing, and will continue to experience, increased competitive
pressures. Federal legislation in the last two years will open transmission
access to any electricity supplier, although it is not presently known to
what extent competition will evolve. Other risks include: (a) the
availability and cost of fuel, (b) the availability and cost of capital,
(c) the effects of conservation on energy demand, (d) the effects of
rapidly changing environmental, safety, and licensing requirements, and
other federal, state, and local regulations, (e) timely and sufficient rate
increases, and (f) opposition to nuclear power.
HEALTH CARE INDUSTRY. The health care industry is subject to regulatory
action by a number of private and governmental agencies, including federal,
state, and local governmental agencies. A major source of revenues for the
health care industry is payments from the Medicare and Medicaid programs.
As a result, the industry is sensitive to legislative changes and
reductions in governmental spending for such programs. Numerous other
factors may affect the industry, such as general and local economic
conditions; demand for services; expenses (including malpractice insurance
premiums); and competition among health care providers. In the future, the
following elements may adversely affect health care facility operations:
adoption of legislation proposing a national health insurance program;
other state or local health care reform measures; medical and technological
advances which dramatically alter the need for health services or the way
in which such services are delivered; changes in medical coverage which
alter the traditional fee-for-service revenue stream; and efforts by
employers, insurers, and governmental agencies to reduce the costs of
health insurance and health care services.
HOUSING. Housing revenue bonds are generally issued by a state, county,
city, local housing authority, or other public agency. They generally are
secured by the revenues derived from mortgages purchased with the proceeds
of the bond issue. It is extremely difficult to predict the supply of
available mortgages to be purchased with the proceeds of an issue or the
future cash flow from the underlying mortgages. Consequently, there are
risks that proceeds will exceed supply, resulting in early retirement of
bonds, or that homeowner repayments will create an irregular cash flow.
Many factors may affect the financing of multi-family housing projects,
including acceptable completion of construction, proper management,
occupancy and rent levels, economic conditions, and changes to current laws
and regulations.
REFUNDING CONTRACTS. The fund may purchase securities on a when-issued
basis in connection with the refinancing of an issuer's outstanding
indebtedness. Refunding contracts require the issuer to sell and the fund
to buy refunded municipal obligations at a stated price and yield on a
settlement date that may be several months or several years in the future.
The fund generally will not be obligated to pay the full purchase price if
it fails to perform under a refunding contract. Instead, refunding
contracts generally provide for payment of liquidated damages to the issuer
(currently 15-20% of the purchase price). The fund may secure its
obligations under a refunding contract by depositing collateral or a letter
of credit equal to the liquidated damages provisions of the refunding
contract. When required by SEC guidelines, the fund will place liquid
assets in a segregated custodial account equal in amount to its obligations
under refunding contracts.
REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a repurchase agreement, the fund purchases a
security and simultaneously commits to sell that security back to the
original seller at an agreed-upon price. The resale price reflects the
purchase price plus an agreed-upon incremental amount which is unrelated to
the coupon rate or maturity of the purchased security. To protect the fund
from risk that the original seller will not fulfill its obligation, the
securities are held in an account of the fund at a bank, marked-to-market
daily, and maintained at a value at least equal to the sale price plus the
accrued incremental amount. While it does not presently appear possible to
eliminate all risks from these transactions (particularly the possibility
that the value of the underlying security will be less than the resale
price, as well as delays and costs to the fund in connection with
bankruptcy proceedings), it is the fund's current policy to engage in
repurchase agreement transactions with parties whose creditworthiness has
been reviewed and found satisfactory by FMR.
RESTRICTED SECURITIES generally can be sold in privately negotiated
transactions, pursuant to an exemption from registration under the
Securities Act of 1933, or in a registered public offering. Where
registration is required, the fund may be obligated to pay all or part of
the registration expense and a considerable period may elapse between the
time it decides to seek registration and the time it may be permitted to
sell a security under an effective registration statement. If, during such
a period, adverse market conditions were to develop, the fund might obtain
a less favorable price than prevailed when it decided to seek registration
of the security.
REVERSE REPURCHASE AGREEMENTS. In a reverse repurchase agreement, the fund
sells a portfolio instrument to another party, such as a bank or
broker-dealer, in return for cash and agrees to repurchase the instrument
at a particular price and time. While a reverse repurchase agreement is
outstanding, the fund will maintain appropriate liquid assets in a
segregated custodial account to cover its obligation under the agreement.
The fund will enter into reverse repurchase agreements only with parties
whose creditworthiness has been found satisfactory by FMR. Such
transactions may increase fluctuations in the market value of the fund's
assets and may be viewed as a form of leverage.
STANDBY COMMITMENTS are puts that entitle holders to same-day settlement at
an exercise price equal to the amortized cost of the underlying security
plus accrued interest, if any, at the time of exercise. The fund may
acquire standby commitments to enhance the liquidity of portfolio
securities. 
Ordinarily the fund will not transfer a standby commitment to a third
party, although it could sell the underlying municipal security to a third
party at any time. The fund may purchase standby commitments separate from
or in conjunction with the purchase of securities subject to such
commitments. In the latter case, the fund would pay a higher price for the
securities acquired, thus reducing their yield to maturity.
Issuers or financial intermediaries may obtain letters of credit or other
guarantees to support their ability to buy securities on demand. FMR may
rely upon its evaluation of a bank's credit in determining whether to
support an instrument supported by a letter of credit. In evaluating a
foreign bank's credit, FMR will consider whether adequate public
information about the bank is available and whether the bank may be subject
to unfavorable political or economic developments, currency controls, or
other governmental restrictions that might affect the bank's ability to
honor its credit commitment.
Standby commitments are subject to certain risks, including the ability of
issuers of standby commitments to pay for securities at the time the
commitments are exercised; the fact that standby commitments are not
marketable by the fund; and the possibility that the maturities of the
underlying securities may be different from those of the commitments. 
TENDER OPTION BONDS are created by coupling an intermediate- or long-term,
fixed-rate, tax-exempt bond (generally held pursuant to a custodial
arrangement) with a tender agreement that gives the holder the option to
tender the bond at its face value. As consideration for providing the
tender option, the sponsor (usually a bank, broker-dealer, or other
financial institution) receives periodic fees equal to the difference
between the bond's fixed coupon rate and the rate (determined by a
remarketing or similar agent) that would cause the bond, coupled with the
tender option, to trade at par on the date of such determination. After
payment of the tender option fee, the fund effectively holds a demand
obligation that bears interest at the prevailing short-term tax-exempt
rate. In selecting tender option bonds for the fund, FMR will consider the
creditworthiness of the issuer of the underlying bond, the custodian, and
the third party provider of the tender option. In certain instances, a
sponsor may terminate a tender option if, for example, the issuer of the
underlying bond defaults on interest payments.
VARIABLE OR FLOATING RATE OBLIGATIONS, including certain participation
interests in municipal instruments, have interest rate adjustment formulas
that help stabilize their market values. Many variable and floating rate
instruments also carry demand features that permit the fund to sell them at
par value plus accrued interest on short notice. 
In many instances bonds and participation interests have tender options or
demand features that permit the fund to tender (or put) the bonds to an
institution at periodic intervals and to receive the principal amount
thereof. The fund considers variable rate instruments structured in this
way (Participating VRDOs) to be essentially equivalent to other VRDOs it
purchases. The IRS has not ruled whether the interest on Participating
VRDOs is tax-exempt and, accordingly, the fund intends to purchase these
instruments based on opinions of bond counsel. A fund may also invest in
fixed-rate bonds that are subject to third party puts and in participation
interests in such bonds held by a bank in trust or otherwise.
ZERO COUPON BONDS do not make regular interest payments. Instead, they are
sold at a deep discount from their face value and are redeemed at face
value when they mature. Because zero coupon bonds do not pay current
income, their prices can be very volatile when interest rates change. In
calculating its daily dividend, the fund takes into account as income a
portion of the difference between a zero coupon bond's purchase price and
its face value.
PORTFOLIO TRANSACTIONS
All orders for the purchase or sale of portfolio securities are placed on
behalf of the funds by FMR pursuant to authority contained in the fund's
management contract. FMR is also responsible for the placement of
transaction orders for other investment companies and accounts for which it
or its affiliates act as investment adviser. In selecting broker-dealers,
subject to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws, FMR
considers various relevant factors, including, but not limited to, the size
and type of the transaction; the nature and character of the markets for
the security to be purchased or sold; the execution efficiency, settlement
capability, and financial condition of the broker-dealer firm; the
broker-dealer's execution services rendered on a continuing basis; and the
reasonableness of any commissions.
The fund may execute portfolio transactions with broker-dealers who provide
research and execution services to the fund or other accounts over which
FMR or its affiliates exercise investment discretion. Such services may
include advice concerning the value of securities; the advisability of
investing in, purchasing, or selling securities; and the availability of
securities or the purchasers or sellers of securities. In addition, such
broker-dealers may furnish analyses and reports concerning issuers,
industries, securities, economic factors and trends, portfolio strategy,
and performance of accounts; effect securities transactions, and perform
functions incidental thereto (such as clearance and settlement). The
selection of such broker-dealers generally is made by FMR (to the extent
possible consistent with execution considerations) based upon the quality
of research and execution services provided.
The receipt of research from broker-dealers that execute transactions on
behalf of the fund may be useful to FMR in rendering investment management
services to the fund or its other clients, and conversely, such research
provided by broker-dealers who have executed transaction orders on behalf
of other FMR clients may be useful to FMR in carrying out its obligations
to the fund. The receipt of such research has not reduced FMR's normal
independent research activities; however, it enables FMR to avoid the
additional expenses that could be incurred if FMR tried to develop
comparable information through its own efforts.
Subject to applicable limitations of the federal securities laws,
broker-dealers may receive commissions for agency transactions that are in
excess of the amount of commissions charged by other broker-dealers in
recognition of their research and execution services. In order to cause the
fund to pay such higher commissions, FMR must determine in good faith that
such commissions are reasonable in relation to the value of the brokerage
and research services provided by such executing broker-dealers, viewed in
terms of a particular transaction or FMR's overall responsibilities to the
fund and its other clients. In reaching this determination, FMR will not
attempt to place a specific dollar value on the brokerage and research
services provided, or to determine what portion of the compensation should
be related to those services.
FMR is authorized to use research services provided by and to place
portfolio transactions with brokerage firms that have provided assistance
in the distribution of shares of the fund, or shares of other Fidelity
funds to the extent permitted by law. FMR may use research services
provided by and place agency transactions with Fidelity Brokerage Services,
Inc. (FBSI), a subsidiary of FMR Corp., if the commissions are fair,
reasonable, and comparable to commissions charged by non-affiliated,
qualified brokerage firms for similar services.
Section 11(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 prohibits members of
national securities exchanges from executing exchange transactions for
accounts which they or their affiliates manage, unless certain requirements
are satisfied. Pursuant to such requirements, the Board of Trustees has
authorized FBSI to execute portfolio transactions on national securities
exchanges in accordance with approved procedures and applicable SEC rules.
The Trustees periodically review FMR's performance of its responsibilities
in connection with the placement of portfolio transactions on behalf of the
fund and review the commissions paid by the fund over representative
periods of time to determine if they are reasonable in relation to the
benefits to the fund.
For the fiscal years ended December 31, 1995 and 1994, the fund's portfolio
turnover rates were 72% and 95%, respectively.
For    the     fiscal    years ended     1995, 1994, and 1993, the fund
paid no brokerage commissions.
   During the fiscal years ended 1995, the fund paid no fees to brokerage
firms that provided research services.    
From time to time the Trustees will review whether the recapture for the
benefit of the fund of some portion of the brokerage commissions or similar
fees paid by the fund on portfolio transactions is legally permissible and
advisable. The fund seeks to recapture soliciting broker-dealer fees on the
tender of portfolio securities, but at present no other recapture
arrangements are in effect. The Trustees intend to continue to review
whether recapture opportunities are available and are legally permissible
and, if so, to determine in the exercise of their business judgment whether
it would be advisable for the fund to seek such recapture.
Although the Trustees and officers of the fund are substantially the same
as those of other funds managed by FMR, investment decisions for the fund
are made independently from those of other funds managed by FMR or accounts
managed by FMR affiliates. It sometimes happens that the same security is
held in the portfolio of more than one of these funds or accounts.
Simultaneous transactions are inevitable when several funds and accounts
are managed by the same investment adviser, particularly when the same
security is suitable for the investment objective of more than one fund or
account.
When two or more funds are simultaneously engaged in the purchase or sale
of the same security, the prices and amounts are allocated in accordance
with procedures believed to be appropriate and equitable for each fund. In
some cases this system could have a detrimental effect on the price or
value of the security as far as the fund is concerned. In other cases,
however, the ability of the fund to participate in volume transactions will
produce better executions and prices for the fund. It is the current
opinion of the Trustees that the desirability of retaining FMR as
investment adviser to the fund outweighs any disadvantages that may be said
to exist from exposure to simultaneous transactions.
VALUATION
Fidelity Service Company (FSC) normally determines each class's net asset
value per share (NAV) as of the close of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE)
(normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). The valuation of portfolio securities is
determined as of this time for the purpose of computing each class's NAV.
Portfolio securities are valued by various methods depending on the primary
market or exchange on which they trade. Fixed-income securities may also be
valued on the basis of information furnished by a pricing service that uses
a valuation matrix which incorporates both dealer-supplied valuations and
electronic data processing techniques. Use of pricing services has been
approved by the Board of Trustees. A number of pricing services are
available, and the Trustees, on the basis of an evaluation of these
services, may use various pricing services or discontinue the use of any
pricing service.
Futures contracts and options are valued on the basis of market quotations,
if available.
Securities and other assets for which there is no readily available market
value are valued in good faith by a committee appointed by the Board of
Trustees. The procedures set forth above need not be used to determine the
value of the securities owned by the fund if, in the opinion of a committee
appointed by the Board of Trustees, some other method would more accurately
reflect the fair market value of such securities.
PERFORMANCE
Each class of shares may quote performance in various ways. All performance
information supplied by the fund in advertising is historical and is not
intended to indicate future returns. Share price, yield, and total return
fluctuate in response to market conditions and other factors, and the value
of shares when redeemed may be more or less than their original cost.
YIELD CALCULATIONS. Yields for a class are computed by dividing the class's
pro rata share of the applicable interest income for a given 30-day or
one-month period, net of expenses, by the average number of shares of that
class entitled to receive distributions during the period, dividing this
figure by the class   's NAV at     the end of the period, and annualizing
the result (assuming compounding of income) in order to arrive at an annual
percentage rate. Income is calculated for purposes of yield quotations in
accordance with standardized methods applicable to all stock and bond
funds. In general, interest income is reduced with respect to bonds trading
at a premium over their par value by subtracting a portion of the premium
from income on a daily basis, and is increased with respect to bonds
trading at a discount by adding a portion of the discount to daily income.
Capital gains and losses generally are excluded from the calculation.
Income calculated for the purposes of calculating a class's yield differs
from income as determined for other accounting purposes. Because of the
different accounting methods used, and because of the compounding of income
assumed in yield calculations, a class's yield may not equal its
distribution rate, the income paid to your account, or the income reported
in the fund's financial statements.
Yield information may be useful in reviewing a class's performance and in
providing a basis for comparison with other investment alternatives.
However, each class's yield fluctuates, unlike investments that pay a fixed
interest rate over a stated period of time. When comparing investment
alternatives, investors should also note the quality and maturity of the
portfolio securities of respective investment companies they have chosen to
consider.
Investors should recognize that in periods of declining interest rates, a
class's yield will tend to be somewhat higher than prevailing market rates,
and in periods of rising interest rates, a class's yield will tend to be
somewhat lower. Also, when interest rates are falling, the inflow of net
new money to the fund from the continuous sale of its shares will likely be
invested in instruments producing lower yields than the balance of the
fund's holdings, thereby reducing a class's current yield. In periods of
rising interest rates, the opposite can be expected to occur.
Tax-equivalent yield is the rate an investor would have to earn from a
fully taxable investment before taxes to equal a class's tax-free yield.
Tax-equivalent yields are calculated by dividing a class's yield by the
result of one minus a stated federal or combined federal and state tax
rate. If only a portion of a class's yield is tax-exempt, only that portion
is adjusted in the calculation.
The following table shows the effect of a shareholder's tax status on
effective yield under federal income tax laws for 1996. It shows the
approximate yield a taxable security must provide at various income
brackets to produce after-tax yields equivalent to those of hypothetical
tax-exempt obligations yielding from 4% to    10    %. Of course, no
assurance can be given that a class will achieve any specific tax-exempt
yield. While the fund invests principally in obligations whose interest is
exempt from federal income tax, other income received by the fund may be
taxable. 
1996 TAX RATES AND TAX-EQUIVALENT YIELDS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                  <C>                  <C>       <C>     <C>     <C>     <C>      <C>      <C>      <C>      
                                         Federal    If individual tax-exempt yield is:                                       
 
Taxable Income*                          Income     4%      5%       6%        7%       8%       9%      10%   
                                         Tax                                                                                
 
Single Return        Joint Return        Bracket**  Then taxable-
                                                    equivalent yield is:                                                     
 
$0 - 24,000          $0 - 40,100            15.0%   4.71%   5.88%   7.06%    8.24%   9.41%      10.59% 11.76    %   
 
$24,001 - 58,150     $40,101 - 96,900       28.0%   5.56%   6.94%   8.33%    9.72%   11.11%   12.50%   13.89%   
 
$58,151 - 121,300    $96,901 - 147,700      31.0%   5.80%   7.25%   8.70%   10.14%   11.59%   13.04%   14.49%   
 
$121,301 - 263,750   $147,701 - 263,750     36.0%   6.25%   7.81%   9.38%   10.94%   12.50%   14.06%   15.63%   
 
$263,751 - above     $263,751 - above       39.6%   6.62%   8.28%   9.93%   11.59%   13.25%   14.90%   16.56%   
 
</TABLE>
 
* Net amount subject to federal income tax after deductions and exemptions.
Assumes ordinary income only.
** Excludes the impact of the phaseout of personal exemptions, limitations
on itemized deductions, and other credits, exclusions, and adjustments
which may increase a taxpayer's marginal tax rate. An increase in a
shareholder's marginal tax rate would increase that shareholder's
tax-equivalent yield.
The fund may invest a portion of its assets in obligations that are subject
to federal income tax. When the fund invests in these obligations, its
tax-equivalent yields will be lower. In the table above, tax-equivalent
yields are calculated assuming investments are 100% federally tax-free.
TOTAL RETURN CALCULATIONS. Total returns quoted in advertising reflect all
aspects of a class's return, including the effect of reinvesting dividends
and capital gain distributions, and any change in a class's NAV over a
stated period. Average annual total returns are calculated by determining
the growth or decline in value of a hypothetical historical investment
   in a class     over a stated period, and then calculating the annually
compounded percentage rate that would have produced the same result if the
rate of growth or decline in value had been constant over the period. For
example, a cumulative total return of 100% over ten years would produce an
average annual total return of 7.18%, which is the steady annual rate of
return that would equal 100% growth on a compounded basis in ten years.
While average annual total returns are a convenient means of comparing
investment alternatives, investors should realize that performance is not
constant over time, but changes from year to year, and that average annual
total returns represent averaged figures as opposed to the actual
year-to-year performance    of a class    .
In addition to average annual total returns, a class may quote unaveraged
or cumulative total returns reflecting the simple change in value of an
investment over a stated period. Average annual and cumulative total
returns may be quoted as a percentage or as a dollar amount, and may be
calculated for a single investment, a series of investments, or a series of
redemptions, over any time period. Total returns may be broken down into
their components of income and capital (including capital gains and changes
in share price) in order to illustrate the relationship of these factors
and their contributions to total return. Total returns may be quoted on a
before-tax or after-tax basis. Total returns, yields, and other performance
information may be quoted numerically or in a table, graph, or similar
illustration.
NET ASSET VALUE. Charts and graphs using NAVs, adjusted NAVs, and benchmark
indices may be used to exhibit performance. An adjusted NAV includes any
distributions paid and reflects all elements of return. Unless otherwise
indicated, adjusted NAVs are not adjusted for sales charges, if any.
HISTORICAL FUND RESULTS. The following table shows the Initial Class's
yield, tax-equivalent yield, and total returns for the periods ended
December 31, 1995. The tax-equivalent yield is based on a 36% federal
income tax rate. Note that the fund may invest in securities whose income
is subject to the federal alternative minimum tax.
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>               <C>         <C>          <C>      <C>     <C>     <C>      <C>      <C>       
                                     Average Annual Total Returns   Cumulative Total Returns               
 
                  Thirty-Da   Tax-         One      Five    Ten     One      Five     Ten       
                  y           Equivalent   Year     Years   Years   Year     Years    Years     
                  Yield       Yield                                                             
 
                                                                                                
 
Municipal Bond:   4.58%       7.16%        18.15%   8.33%   8.73%   18.15%   49.17%   130.90%   
Initial Class                                                                                   
 
</TABLE>
 
The following table shows the income and capital elements of the Initial
Class's cumulative total return. The table compares the Initial Class's
return to the record of the Standard & Poor's 500    Index     (S&P
500(registered trademark)), the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), and
the cost of living (measured by the Consumer Price Index, or CPI) over the
same period. The CPI information is as of the month-end closest to the
initial investment date for the fund. The S&P 500 and DJIA comparisons are
provided to show how the Initial Class's total return compared to the
record of a broad average of common stocks and a narrower set of stocks of
major industrial companies, respectively, over the same period. Of course,
since the fund invests in fixed-income securities, common stocks represent
a different type of investment from the fund. Common stocks generally offer
greater growth potential than the fund, but generally experience greater
price volatility, which means greater potential for loss. In addition,
common stocks generally provide lower income than a fixed-income investment
such as the fund. Figures for the S&P 500 and DJIA are based on the prices
of unmanaged groups of stocks and, unlike the Initial Class's returns, do
not include the effect of paying brokerage commissions or other costs of
investing.
During the ten year period ended December 31, 1995, a hypothetical $10,000
investment in the Initial Class would have grown to $23,090, assuming all
distributions were reinvested. This was a period of fluctuating interest
rates and bond prices and the figures below should not be considered
representative of the dividend income or capital gain or loss that could be
realized from an investment in the Initial Class today.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>           <C>          <C>             <C>             <C>        <C>        <C>               <C>        
MUNICIPAL BOND FUND - INITIAL CLASS                                  INDICES               
 
Year ended    Value of     Value of        Value of        Total      S&P 500    DJIA              Cost of    
December 31   Initial      Reinvested      Reinvested      Value                                   Living*    
              $10,000      Dividend        Capital Gain                                                       
              Investment   Distributions   Distributions                                                      
 
                                                                                                              
 
                                                                                                              
 
                                                                                                              
 
1995          $ 11,146     $ 10,091        $ 1,853         $ 23,090   $ 40,054   $ 4   5,581       $ 14,044   
 
1994           9,933        7,969           1,641           19,543     29,114     33,338            13,696    
 
1993           11,712       8,134           1,510           21,356     28,735     31,759            13,339    
 
1992           11,456       6,879           535             18,870     26,104     27,146            12,983    
 
1991           11,415       5,766           142             17,323     24,251     25,300            12,617    
 
1990           10,957       4,523           0               15,480     18,585     20,347            12,242    
 
1989           10,957       3,522           0               14,479     19,183     20,457            11,537    
 
1988           10,714       2,501           0               13,215     14,567     15,526            11,025    
 
1987           10,243       1,524           0               11,767     12,492     13,394            10,558    
 
1986           11,159       795             0               11,954     11,868     12,703            10,110    
 
</TABLE>
 
* From month-end closest to initial investment date.
Explanatory Notes: With an initial investment of $10,000 made on
   December 31, 1985    , the net amount invested in Initial Class shares
was $10,000. The cost of the initial investment ($10,000), together with
the aggregate cost of reinvested dividends and capital gain distributions
for the period covered (their cash value at the time they were reinvested),
amounted to $21,786. If distributions had not been reinvested, the amount
of distributions earned from the Initial Class over time would have been
smaller, and cash payments for the period would have amounted to $6,940 for
dividends and $1,084 for capital gains distributions. Tax consequences of
different investments have not been factored into the above figures. 
PERFORMANCE COMPARISONS.    A class's p    erformance may be compared to
the performance of other mutual funds in general, or to the performance of
particular types of mutual funds. These comparisons may be expressed as
mutual fund rankings prepared by Lipper Analytical Services, Inc. (Lipper),
an independent service located in Summit, New Jersey that monitors the
performance of mutual funds. Lipper generally ranks funds on the basis of
total return, assuming reinvestment of distributions, but does not take
sales charges or redemption fees into consideration, and is prepared
without regard to tax consequences. Lipper may also rank funds based on
yield. In addition to the mutual fund rankings,    a class's
    performance may be compared to stock, bond, and money market mutual
fund performance indices prepared by Lipper or other organizations. Each
class of the fund may be compared to the Lehman Brothers Municipal Bond
Index, a total return performance benchmark for the investment-grade
municipal bond market. Issues included in the Index have a minimum credit
rating of Baa and a maturity of at least one year. To be included in the
Index, an issue must have been issued after December 31, 1990 and have a
total amount outstanding of $50 million or more. Subsequent to December 31,
1995, zero coupon bonds and issues subject to the alternative minimum tax
are included in the Index. When comparing these indices, it is important to
remember the risk and return characteristics of each type of investment.
For example, while stock mutual funds may offer higher potential returns,
they also carry the highest degree of share price volatility. Likewise,
money market funds may offer greater stability of principal, but generally
do not offer the higher potential returns available from stock mutual
funds.
From time to time,    a class's     performance may also be compared to
other mutual funds tracked by financial or business publications and
periodicals. For example, the fund may quote Morningstar, Inc. in its
advertising materials. Morningstar, Inc. is a mutual fund rating service
that rates mutual funds on the basis of risk-adjusted performance. Rankings
that compare the performance of Fidelity funds to one another in
appropriate categories over specific periods of time may also be quoted in
advertising.
A class may be compared in advertising to Certificates of Deposit (CDs) or
other investments issued by banks or other depository institutions. Mutual
funds differ from bank investments in several respects. For example, the
fund may offer greater liquidity or higher potential returns than CDs, the
fund does not guarantee your principal or your return, and fund shares are
not FDIC insured.
Fidelity may provide information designed to help individuals understand
their investment goals and explore various financial strategies. Such
information may include information about current economic, market, and
political conditions; materials that describe general principles of
investing, such as asset allocation, diversification, risk tolerance, and
goal setting; questionnaires designed to help create a personal financial
profile; worksheets used to project savings needs based on assumed rates of
inflation and hypothetical rates of return; and action plans offering
investment alternatives. Materials may also include discussions of
Fidelity's asset allocation funds and other Fidelity funds, products, and
services.
Ibbotson Associates of Chicago, Illinois (Ibbotson) provides historical
returns of the capital markets in the United States, including common
stocks, small capitalization stocks, long-term corporate bonds,
intermediate-term government bonds, long-term government bonds, Treasury
bills, the U.S. rate of inflation (based on the CPI), and combinations of
various capital markets. The performance of these capital markets is based
on the returns of different indices. 
Fidelity funds may use the performance of these capital markets in order to
demonstrate general risk-versus-reward investment scenarios. Performance
comparisons may also include the value of a hypothetical investment in any
of these capital markets. The risks associated with the security types in
any capital market may or may not correspond directly to those of the
funds. Ibbotson calculates total returns in the same method as the funds.
The funds may also compare performance to that of other compilations or
indices that may be developed and made available in the future. 
A fund may compare its performance or the performance of securities in
which it may invest to averages published by IBC USA (Publications), Inc.
of Ashland, Massachusetts. These averages assume reinvestment of
distributions. The IBC/Donoghue's MONEY FUND AVERAGES(trademark)/All
Tax-Free, which is reported in the MONEY FUND REPORT(registered trademark),
covers over 395 Tax-Free money market funds. The Bond Fund Report
AverageS(trademark)/Municipal, which is reported in the BOND FUND
REPORT(registered trademark), covers over 509 bond funds. When evaluating
comparisons to money market funds, investors should consider the relevant
differences in investment objectives and policies. Specifically, money
market funds invest in short-term, high-quality instruments and seek to
maintain a stable $1.00 share price. The fund, however, invests in
longer-term instruments and its share price changes daily in response to a
variety of factors.
The fund may compare and contrast in advertising the relative advantages of
investing in a mutual fund versus an individual municipal bond. Unlike
tax-free mutual funds, individual municipal bonds offer a stated rate of
interest and, if held to maturity, repayment of principal. Although some
individual municipal bonds might offer a higher return, they do not offer
the reduced risk of a mutual fund that invests in many different
securities. The initial investment requirements and sales charges of many
tax-free mutual funds are lower than the purchase cost of individual
municipal bonds, which are generally issued in $5,000 denominations and are
subject to direct brokerage costs.
In advertising materials, Fidelity may reference or discuss its products
and services, which may include other Fidelity funds; retirement investing;
brokerage products and services; model portfolios or allocations; saving
for college or other goals; charitable giving; and the Fidelity credit
card. In addition, Fidelity may quote or reprint financial or business
publications and periodicals as they relate to current economic and
political conditions, fund management, portfolio composition, investment
philosophy, investment techniques, the desirability of owning a particular
mutual fund, and Fidelity services and products. Fidelity may also reprint,
and use as advertising and sales literature, articles from Fidelity Focus,
a quarterly magazine provided free of charge to Fidelity fund shareholders.
The fund may present its fund number, Quotron(trademark) number, and CUSIP
number, and discuss or quote its current portfolio manager.
VOLATILITY.    The fund     may quote various measures of volatility and
benchmark correlation in advertising. In addition, the fund may compare
these measures to those of other funds. Measures of volatility seek to
compare a class's historical share price fluctuations or total returns to
those of a benchmark. Measures of benchmark correlation indicate how valid
a comparative benchmark may be. All measures of volatility and correlation
are calculated using averages of historical data. In advertising, the fund
may also discuss or illustrate examples of interest rate sensitivity.
MOMENTUM INDICATORS indicate a class's price movements over specific
periods of time. Each point on the momentum indicator represents a class's
percentage change in price movements over that period.
   The fund may advertise e    xamples of the effects of periodic
investment plans, including the principle of dollar cost averaging. In such
a program, an investor invests a fixed dollar amount in a class at periodic
intervals, thereby purchasing fewer shares when prices are high and more
shares when prices are low. While such a strategy does not assure a profit
or guard against loss in a declining market, the investor's average cost
per share can be lower than if fixed numbers of shares are purchased at the
same intervals. In evaluating such a plan, investors should consider their
   willingness     to continue purchasing shares during periods of low
price levels.
As of    April 30, 1996    , FMR advised over $2   5    .5 billion in
tax-free fund assets, $8   2     billion in money market fund assets,
$2   71     billion in equity fund assets, $   53     billion in
international fund assets, and $23 billion in Spartan fund assets. The fund
may reference the growth and variety of money market mutual funds and the
adviser's innovation and participation in the industry. The equity funds
under management figure represents the largest amount of equity fund assets
under management by a mutual fund investment adviser in the United States,
making FMR America's leading equity (stock) fund manager. FMR, its
subsidiaries, and affiliates maintain a worldwide information and
communications network for the purpose of researching and managing
investments abroad.
In addition to performance rankings, the fund may compare each class's
total expense ratio to the average total expense ratio of similar funds
tracked by Lipper. A class's total expense ratio is a significant factor in
comparing bond and money market investments because of its effect on yield. 
ADDITIONAL PURCHASE, EXCHANGE, AND REDEMPTION INFORMATION
The fund is open for business and the NAV of each class is calculated each
day the NYSE is open for trading. The NYSE has designated the following
holiday closings for 1996: New Year's Day, Presidents' Day, Good Friday,
Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas
Day. Although FMR expects the same holiday schedule to be observed in the
future, the NYSE may modify its holiday schedule at any time. In addition,
the fund will not process wire purchases and redemptions on days when the
Federal Reserve Wire System is closed.
FSC normally determines each class's NAV as of the close of the NYSE
(normally 4:00 p.m. Eastern time). However, NAV may be calculated earlier
if trading on the NYSE is restricted or as permitted by the SEC. To the
extent that portfolio securities are traded in other markets on days when
the NYSE is closed, a class's NAV may be affected on days when investors do
not have access to the fund to purchase or redeem shares. In addition,
trading in some of the fund's portfolio securities may not occur on days
when the fund is open for business.
If the Trustees determine that existing conditions make cash payments
undesirable, redemption payments may be made in whole or in part in
securities or other property, valued for this purpose as they are valued in
computing each class's NAV. Shareholders receiving securities or other
property on redemption may realize a gain or loss for tax purposes, and
will incur any costs of sale, as well as the associated inconveniences.
Pursuant to Rule 11a-3 under the 1940 Act, the fund is required to give
shareholders at least 60 days' notice prior to terminating or modifying its
exchange privilege. Under the Rule, the 60-day notification requirement may
be waived if (i) the only effect of a modification would be to reduce or
eliminate an administrative fee, redemption fee, or deferred sales charge
ordinarily payable at the time of an exchange, or (ii) the fund suspends
the redemption of the shares to be exchanged as permitted under the 1940
Act or the rules and regulations thereunder, or the fund to be acquired
suspends the sale of its shares because it is unable to invest amounts
effectively in accordance with its investment objective and policies.
In the Prospectus, the fund has notified shareholders that it reserves the
right at any time, without prior notice, to refuse exchange purchases by
any person or group if, in FMR's judgment, the fund would be unable to
invest effectively in accordance with its investment objective and
policies, or would otherwise potentially be adversely affected.
DISTRIBUTIONS AND TAXES
DISTRIBUTIONS. If you request to have distributions mailed to you and the
U.S. Postal Service cannot deliver your checks, or if your checks remain
uncashed for six months, Fidelity may reinvest your distributions at the
then-current NAV. All subsequent distributions will then be reinvested
until you provide Fidelity with alternate instructions.
DIVIDENDS. To the extent that the fund's income is designated as federally
tax-exempt interest, the daily dividends declared by the fund are also
federally tax-exempt. Short-term capital gains are distributed as dividend
income, but do not qualify for the dividends-received deduction. These
gains will be taxed as ordinary income. The fund will send each shareholder
a notice in January describing the tax status of dividend and capital gain
distributions (if any) for the prior year. 
Shareholders are required to report tax-exempt income on their federal tax
returns. Shareholders who earn other income, such as Social Security
benefits, may be subject to federal income tax on up to 85% of such
benefits to the extent that their income, including tax-exempt income,
exceeds certain base amounts.
   The fund purchases municipal securities whose interest FMR believes is
free from federal income tax. Generally, issuers or other parties have
entered into covenants requiring continuing compliance with federal tax
requirements to preserve the tax-free status of interest payments over the
life of the security. If at any time the covenants are not complied with,
or if the IRS otherwise determines that the issuer did not comply with
relevant tax requirements, interest payments from a security could become
federally taxable retroactive to the date the security was issued. For
certain types of structured securities, the tax status of the pass-through
of tax-free income may also be based on the federal tax treatment of the
structure.    
As a result of the Tax Reform Act of 1986, interest on certain "private
activity" securities is subject to the federal alternative minimum tax
(AMT), although the interest continues to be excludable from gross income
for other tax purposes. Interest from private activity securities will be
considered tax-exempt for purposes of the fund's policies of investing at
least 80% of its assets are invested in municipal securities whose interest
is free from federal income tax. Interest from private activity securities
is a tax preference item for the purposes of determining whether a taxpayer
is subject to the AMT and the amount of AMT to be paid, if any. Private
activity securities issued after August 7, 1986 to benefit a private or
industrial user or to finance a private facility are affected by this rule. 
A portion of the gain on bonds purchased with market discount after April
30, 1993 and short-term capital gains distributed by the fund are taxable
to shareholders as dividends, not as capital gains.
Corporate investors should note that a tax preference item for purposes of
the corporate AMT is 75% of the amount by which adjusted current earnings
(which includes tax-exempt interest) exceeds the alternative minimum
taxable income of the corporation. If a shareholder receives an
exempt-interest dividend and sells shares at a loss after holding them for
a period of six months or less, the loss will be disallowed to the extent
of the amount of the exempt-interest dividend. 
CAPITAL GAIN DISTRIBUTIONS. Long-term capital gains earned by the fund on
the sale of securities and distributed to shareholders are federally
taxable as long-term capital gains, regardless of the length of time
shareholders have held their shares. If a shareholder receives a long-term
capital gain distribution on shares of the fund, and such shares are held
six months or less and are sold at a loss, the portion of the loss equal to
the amount of the long-term capital gain distribution will be considered a
long-term loss for tax purposes. Short-term capital gains distributed by
the fund are taxable to shareholders as dividends, not as capital gains. 
As of December 31, 1995, the fund had a capital loss carryforward of
approximately $27,853,000. This loss carryforward will expire on December
31, 2003 and is available to offset future capital gains.
TAX STATUS OF THE FUND. The fund intends to qualify each year as a
"regulated investment company" for tax purposes so that it will not be
liable for federal tax on income and capital gains distributed to
shareholders. In order to qualify as a regulated investment company and
avoid being subject to federal income or excise taxes at the fund level,
the fund intends to distribute substantially all of its net investment
income and net realized capital gains within each calendar year as well as
on a fiscal year basis. The fund intends to comply with other tax rules
applicable to regulated investment companies, including a requirement that
capital gains from the sale of securities held less than three months
constitute less than 30% of the fund's gross income for each fiscal year.
Gains from some futures contracts and options are included in this 30%
calculation, which may limit the fund's investments in such instruments.
The fund is treated as a separate entity from the other funds of Fidelity
Municipal Trust for tax purposes.
OTHER TAX INFORMATION. The information above is only a summary of some of
the tax consequences generally affecting the fund and its shareholders, and
no attempt has been made to discuss individual tax consequences. In
addition to federal income taxes, shareholders may be subject to state and
local taxes on fund distributions, and shares may be subject to state and
local personal property taxes. Investors should consult their tax advisers
to determine whether the fund is suitable to their particular tax
situation.
FMR
All of the stock of FMR is owned by FMR Corp., its parent organized in
1972. The voting common stock of FMR Corp. is divided into two classes.
Class B is held predominantly by members of the Edward C. Johnson 3d family
and is entitled to 49% of the vote on any matter acted upon by the voting
common stock. Class A is held predominantly by non-Johnson family member
employees of FMR Corp. and its affiliates and is entitled to 51% of the
vote on any such matter. The Johnson family group and all other Class B
shareholders have entered into a shareholders' voting agreement under which
all Class B shares will be voted in accordance with the majority vote of
Class B shares. Under the 1940 Act, control of a company is presumed where
one individual or group of individuals owns more than 25% of the voting
stock of that company. Therefore, through their ownership of voting common
stock and the execution of the shareholders' voting agreement, members of
the Johnson family may be deemed, under the 1940 Act, to form a controlling
group with respect to FMR Corp.
At present, the principal operating activities of FMR Corp. are those
conducted by three of its divisions as follows: FSC, which is the transfer
and shareholder servicing agent for certain of the funds advised by FMR;
Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company, which performs
shareholder servicing functions for institutional customers and funds sold
through intermediaries; and Fidelity Investments Retail Marketing Company,
which provides marketing services to various companies within the Fidelity
organization.
Fidelity investment personnel may invest in securities for their own
account pursuant to a code of ethics that sets forth all employees'
fiduciary responsibilities regarding the funds, establishes procedures for
personal investing and restricts certain transactions. For example, all
personal trades in most securities require pre-clearance, and participation
in initial public offerings is prohibited. In addition, restrictions on the
timing of personal investing in relation to trades by Fidelity funds and on
short-term trading have been adopted.
TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS
The Trustees,    Members of the Advisory Board,     and executive officers
of the trust are listed below. Except as indicated, each individual has
held the office shown or other offices in the same company for the last
five years. All persons named as Trustees    and Members of the Advisory
Board     also serve in similar capacities for other funds advised by FMR.
The business address of each Trustee and officer who is an "interested
person" (as defined in the        1940    Act    ) is 82 Devonshire Street,
Boston, Massachusetts 02109, which is also the address of FMR. The business
address of all the other Trustees    and Members of the Advisory Board
    is Fidelity Investments, P.O. Box 9235, Boston, Massachusetts
02205-9235. Those Trustees who are "interested persons" by virtue of their
affiliation with either the trust or FMR are indicated by an asterisk (*).
*EDWARD C. JOHNSON 3d (66), Trustee and President, is Chairman, Chief
Executive Officer and a Director of FMR Corp.; a Director and Chairman of
the Board and of the Executive Committee of FMR; Chairman and a Director of
FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity
Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
*J. GARY BURKHEAD (55), Trustee and Senior Vice President, is President of
FMR; and President and a Director of FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity Management &
Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.
RALPH F. COX (64), Trustee (1991), is a consultant to Western Mining
Corporation (1994). Prior to February 1994, he was President of Greenhill
Petroleum Corporation (petroleum exploration and production). Until March
1990, Mr. Cox was President and Chief Operating Officer of Union Pacific
Resources Company (exploration and production). He is a Director of
Sanifill Corporation (non-hazardous waste, 1993) and CH2M Hill Companies
(engineering). In addition, he serves on the Board of Directors of the
Texas State Chamber of Commerce, and he is a member of advisory boards of
Texas A&M University and the University of Texas at Austin.
PHYLLIS BURKE DAVIS (64), Trustee (1992). Prior to her retirement in
September 1991, Mrs. Davis was the Senior Vice President of Corporate
Affairs of Avon Products, Inc. She is currently a Director of BellSouth
Corporation (telecommunications), Eaton Corporation (manufacturing, 1991),
and the TJX Companies, Inc. (retail stores), and previously served as a
Director of Hallmark Cards, Inc. (1985-1991) and Nabisco Brands, Inc. In
addition, she is a member of the President's Advisory Council of The
University of Vermont School of Business Administration.
RICHARD J. FLYNN (72), Trustee and Chairman of the non-interested Trustees,
is a financial consultant. Prior to September 1986, Mr. Flynn was Vice
Chairman and a Director of the Norton Company (manufacturer of industrial
devices). He is currently a Trustee of College of the Holy Cross and Old
Sturbridge Village, Inc., and he previously served as a Director of
Mechanics Bank (1971-1995).
E. BRADLEY JONES (68), Trustee. Prior to his retirement in 1984, Mr. Jones
was Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of LTV Steel Company. He is a
Director of TRW Inc. (original equipment and replacement products),
Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (mining), Consolidated Rail Corporation, Birmingham
Steel Corporation, and RPM, Inc. (manufacturer of chemical products), and
he previously served as a Director of NACCO Industries, Inc. (mining and
marketing, 1985-1995) and Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc. (1985-1995).
In addition, he serves as a Trustee of First Union Real Estate Investments,
a Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of the Cleveland Clinic
Foundation, a Trustee and member of the Executive Committee of University
School (Cleveland), and a Trustee of Cleveland Clinic Florida.
DONALD J. KIRK (63), Trustee, is Executive-in-Residence (1995) at Columbia
University Graduate School of Business and a financial consultant. From
1987 to January 1995, Mr. Kirk was a Professor at Columbia University
Graduate School of Business. Prior to 1987, he was Chairman of the
Financial Accounting Standards Board. Mr. Kirk is a Director of General Re
Corporation (reinsurance), and he previously served as a Director of
Valuation Research Corp. (appraisals and valuations, 1993-1995). In
addition, he serves as Chairman of the Board of Directors of the National
Arts Stabilization Fund, Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees of the
Greenwich Hospital Association, a Member of the Public Oversight Board of
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants' SEC Practice
Section (1995), and as a Public Governor of the National Association of
Securities Dealers, Inc. (1996).
*PETER S. LYNCH (53), Trustee (1990) is Vice Chairman and Director of FMR
(1992). Prior to May 31, 1990, he was a Director of FMR and Executive Vice
President of FMR (a position he held until March 31, 1991); Vice President
of Fidelity Magellan Fund and FMR Growth Group Leader; and Managing
Director of FMR Corp. Mr. Lynch was also Vice President of Fidelity
Investments Corporate Services (1991-1992). He is a Director of W.R. Grace
& Co. (chemicals) and Morrison Knudsen Corporation (engineering and
construction). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of Boston College,
Massachusetts Eye & Ear Infirmary, Historic Deerfield (1989) and Society
for the Preservation of New England Antiquities, and as an Overseer of the
Museum of Fine Arts of Boston.
GERALD C. McDONOUGH (67), Trustee and Vice-Chairman of the non-interested
Trustees, is Chairman of G.M. Management Group (strategic advisory
services). Prior to his retirement in July 1988, he was Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer of Leaseway Transportation Corp. (physical distribution
services). Mr. McDonough is a Director of ACME-Cleveland Corp. (metal
working, telecommunications and electronic products), Brush-Wellman Inc.
(metal refining), York International Corp. (air conditioning and
refrigeration), Commercial Intertech Corp. (water treatment equipment,
1992), and Associated Estates Realty Corporation (a real estate investment
trust, 1993).
EDWARD H. MALONE (71), Trustee. Prior to his retirement in 1985, Mr. Malone
was Chairman, General Electric Investment Corporation and a Vice President
of General Electric Company. He is a Director of Allegheny Power Systems,
Inc. (electric utility), General Re Corporation (reinsurance) and Mattel
Inc. (toy manufacturer). In addition, he serves as a Trustee of the Naples
Philharmonic Center for the Arts and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and
he is a member of the Advisory Boards of Butler Capital Corporation Funds
and Warburg, Pincus Partnership Funds.
MARVIN L. MANN (63), Trustee (1993), is Chairman of the Board, President,
and Chief Executive Officer of Lexmark International, Inc. (office
machines, 1991). Prior to 1991, he held the positions of Vice President of
International Business Machines Corporation ("IBM") and President and
General Manager of various IBM divisions and subsidiaries. Mr. Mann is a
Director of M.A. Hanna Company (chemicals, 1993) and Infomart (marketing
services, 1991), a Trammell Crow Co. In addition, he serves as the Campaign
Vice Chairman of the Tri-State United Way (1993) and is a member of the
University of Alabama President's Cabinet.
THOMAS R. WILLIAMS (67), Trustee, is President of The Wales Group, Inc.
(management and financial advisory services). Prior to retiring in 1987,
Mr. Williams served as Chairman of the Board of First Wachovia Corporation
(bank holding company), and Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of The
First National Bank of Atlanta and First Atlanta Corporation (bank holding
company). He is currently a Director of BellSouth Corporation
(telecommunications), ConAgra, Inc. (agricultural products), Fisher
Business Systems, Inc. (computer software), Georgia Power Company (electric
utility), Gerber Alley & Associates, Inc. (computer software), National
Life Insurance Company of Vermont, American Software, Inc., and AppleSouth,
Inc. (restaurants, 1992).
   WILLIAM O. McCOY (62), Member of the Advisory Board (1996), is the Vice
President of Finance for the University of North Carolina (16-school
system, 1995). Prior to his retirement in December 1994, Mr. McCoy was Vice
Chairman of the Board of BellSouth Corporation (telecommunications) and
President of BellSouth Enterprises. He is currently a Director of Liberty
Corporation (holding company), Weeks Corporation of Atlanta (real estate,
1994), and Carolina Power and Light Company (electric utility, 1996).
Previously, he was a Director of First American Corporation (bank holding
company, 1979-1996). In addition, Mr. McCoy serves as a member of the Board
of Visitors for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1994) and
for the Kenan Flager Business School (University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill).    
FRED L. HENNING, JR. (57), Vice President, is Vice President of Fidelity's
money market (1994) and fixed-income (1995) funds and Senior Vice President
of FMR Texas Inc.
ARTHUR S. LORING (48), Secretary, is Senior Vice President (1993) and
General Counsel of FMR, Vice President-Legal of FMR Corp., and Vice
President and Clerk of FDC.
KENNETH A. RATHGEBER (49), Treasurer (1995), is Treasurer of the Fidelity
funds and is an employee of FMR (1995). Before joining FMR, Mr. Rathgeber
was a Vice President of Goldman Sachs & Co. (1978-1995), where he served in
various positions, including Vice President of Proprietary Accounting
(1988-1992), Global Co-Controller (1992-1994), and Chief Operations Officer
of Goldman Sachs (Asia) LLC (1994-1995).
JOHN H. COSTELLO (49), Assistant Treasurer, is an employee of FMR.
LEONARD M. RUSH (50), Assistant Treasurer (1994), is an employee of FMR
(1994). Prior to becoming Assistant Treasurer of the Fidelity funds, Mr.
Rush was Chief Compliance Officer of FMR Corp. (1993-1994) and Chief
Financial Officer of Fidelity Brokerage Services, Inc. (1990-1993).
The following table sets forth information describing the compensation of
each current Trustee of the fund for his or her services as trustee for the
fiscal year ended December 31, 1995.
      COMPENSATION TABLE               
 
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                       <C>             <C>                  <C>                 <C>             
Trustees                  Aggregate       Pension or           Estimated Annual    Total           
                          Compensation    Retirement           Benefits Upon       Compensation    
                          from            Benefits Accrued     Retirement from     from the Fund   
                          the Fund        as Part of Fund      the Fund Complex*   Complex*        
                                          Expenses from the                                        
                                          Fund Complex*                                            
 
J. Gary Burkhead **       $ 0             $ 0                  $ 0                 $ 0             
 
Ralph F. Cox               439             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Phyllis Burke Davis        429             5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
Richard J. Flynn           549             0                    52,000              160,500        
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d **    0               0                    0                   0              
 
E. Bradley Jones           439             5,200                49,400              128,000        
 
Donald J. Kirk             451             5,200                52,000              129,500        
 
Peter S. Lynch **          0               0                    0                   0              
 
Gerald C. McDonough        440             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Edward H. Malone           439             5,200                44,200              128,000        
 
Marvin L. Mann             439             5,200                52,000              128,000        
 
Thomas R. Williams         429             5,200                52,000              125,000        
 
</TABLE>
 
* Information is as of December 31, 1995 for 219 funds in the complex.
** Interested trustees of the fund are compensated by FMR.
The non-interested Trustees may elect to defer receipt of all or a
percentage of their annual fees in accordance with the terms of a Deferred
Compensation Plan (the "Plan"). Under the Plan, compensation deferred by a
Trustee is periodically adjusted as though an equivalent amount had been
invested and reinvested in shares of one or more funds in the complex
designated by such Trustee (designated securities). The amount paid to the
Trustee under the Plan will be determined based upon the performance of
such investments. Deferral of Trustees' fees in accordance with the Plan
will have a negligible effect on the fund's assets, liabilities, and net
income per share, and will not obligate the fund to retain the services of
any Trustee or to pay any particular level of compensation to the Trustee.
The fund may invest in such designated securities without shareholder
approval.
Under a retirement program adopted in July 1988, the non-interested
Trustees, upon reaching age 72, become eligible to participate in a
retirement program under which they receive payments during their lifetime
from a fund based on their basic trustee fees and length of service. The
obligation of a fund to make such payments is not secured or funded.
Trustees become eligible if, at the time of retirement, they have served on
the Board for at least five years. Currently, Messrs. Ralph S. Saul,
William R. Spaulding, Bertram H. Witham, and David L. Yunich, all former
non-interested Trustees, receive retirement benefits under the program.
On    May 31, 1996,     the Trustees and officers of the fund owned, in the
aggregate, less than 1% of the fund's total outstanding shares.
MANAGEMENT CONTRACT
The fund employs FMR to furnish investment advisory and other services.
Under its management contract with the fund, FMR acts as investment adviser
and, subject to the supervision of the Board of Trustees, directs the
investments of the fund in accordance with its investment objective,
policies, and limitations. FMR also provides the fund with all necessary
office facilities and personnel for servicing the fund's investments,
compensates all officers of the fund and all Trustees who are "interested
persons" of the trust or of FMR, and all personnel of the fund or FMR
performing services relating to research, statistical, and investment
activities.
In addition, FMR or its affiliates, subject to the supervision of the Board
of Trustees, provide the management and administrative services necessary
for the operation of the fund. These services include providing facilities
for maintaining the fund's organization; supervising relations with
custodians, transfer and pricing agents, accountants, underwriters, and
other persons dealing with the fund; preparing all general shareholder
communications and conducting shareholder relations; maintaining the fund's
records and the registration of the fund's shares under federal and state
laws; developing management and shareholder services for the fund; and
furnishing reports, evaluations, and analyses on a variety of subjects to
the Trustees.
In addition to the management fee payable to FMR and the fees payable to
UMB, the fund pays all of its expenses, without limitation, that are not
assumed by those parties. The fund pays for the typesetting, printing, and
mailing of its proxy materials to shareholders, legal expenses, and the
fees of the custodian, auditor and non-interested Trustees. Although the
fund's current management contract provides that the fund will pay for
typesetting, printing, and mailing prospectuses, statements of additional
information, notices, and reports to shareholders, the trust, on behalf of
the fund, has entered into a revised transfer agent agreement with UMB,
pursuant to which UMB bears the costs of providing these services to
existing shareholders. Other expenses paid by the fund include interest,
taxes, brokerage commissions, and the fund's proportionate share of
insurance premiums and Investment Company Institute dues. The fund is also
liable for such non-recurring expenses as may arise, including costs of any
litigation to which the fund may be a party, and any obligation it may have
to indemnify its officers and Trustees with respect to litigation.
FMR is the fund's manager pursuant to a management contract dated January
1, 1994, which was approved by shareholders on December 15, 1993.
For the services of FMR under the contract, the fund pays FMR a monthly
management fee composed of the sum of two elements: a group fee rate and an
individual fund fee rate.
The group fee rate is based on the monthly average net assets of all of the
registered investment companies with which FMR has management contracts and
is calculated on a cumulative basis pursuant to the graduated fee rate
schedule shown below on the left. The schedule below on the right shows the
effective annual group fee rate at various asset levels, which is the
result of cumulatively applying the annualized rates on the left. For
example, the effective annual fee rate at $366.9 billion of group net
assets - the approximate level for December 1995 - was .1482%, which is the
weighted average of the respective fee rates for each level of group net
assets up to $366.9 billion.
GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE   EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
Average Group     Annualized   Group Net        Effective Annual   
Assets            Rate         Assets           Fee Rate           
 
 0 - $3 billion   .3700%        $ 0.5 billion   .3700%             
 
 3 - 6            .3400          25             .2664              
 
 6 - 9            .3100          50             .2188              
 
 9 - 12           .2800          75             .1986              
 
 12 - 15          .2500          100            .1869              
 
 15 - 18          .2200          125            .1793              
 
 18 - 21          .2000          150            .1736              
 
 21 - 24          .1900          175            .1695              
 
 24 - 30          .1800          200            .1658              
 
 30 - 36          .1750          225            .1629              
 
 36 - 42          .1700          250            .1604              
 
 42 - 48          .1650          275            .1583              
 
 48 - 66          .1600          300            .1565              
 
 66 - 84          .1550          325            .1548              
 
 84 - 120         .1500          350            .1533              
 
 120 - 174        .1450          400            .1507              
 
 174 - 228        .1400                                            
 
 228 - 282        .1375                                            
 
 282 - 336        .1350                                            
 
 Over 336         .1325                                            
 
Prior to January 1, 1994, the group fee rate was based on a schedule with
breakpoints ending at .1400% for average group assets in excess of $174
billion. The group fee rate breakpoints shown above for average group
assets in excess of $120 billion and under $228 billion were voluntarily
adopted by FMR on January 1, 1992. The additional breakpoints shown above
for average group assets in excess of $228 billion were voluntarily adopted
by FMR on November 1, 1993. The fund's current management contract reflects
these extensions of the group fee rate schedule.
On August 1, 1994, FMR voluntarily revised the prior extensions to the
group fee rate schedule, and added new breakpoints for average group assets
in excess of $156 billion and under $372 billion as shown in the schedule
   on the next page    . The revised group fee rate schedule was identical
to the above schedule for average group assets under $156 billion.
On January 1, 1996, FMR voluntarily added new breakpoints to the revised
schedule for average group assets in excess of $372 billion, pending
shareholder approval of a new management contract reflecting the revised
schedule and additional breakpoints. The revised group fee rate schedule
and the extensions provide for lower management fee rates as FMR's assets
under management increase. For average group assets in excess of $156
billion, the revised group fee rate schedule with additional breakpoints
voluntarily adopted by FMR is as follows:
GROUP FEE RATE SCHEDULE   EFFECTIVE ANNUAL FEE RATES   
 
Average Group         Annualized   Group Net        Effective Annual   
Assets                Rate         Assets           Fee Rate           
 
 120 - $156 billion   .1450%        $ 150 billion   .1736%             
 
 156 - 192            .1400          175            .1690              
 
 192 - 228            .1350          200            .1652              
 
 228 - 264            .1300          225            .1618              
 
 264 - 300            .1275          250            .1587              
 
 300 - 336            .1250          275            .1560              
 
 336 - 372            .1225          300            .1536              
 
 372 - 408            .1200          325            .1514              
 
 408 - 444            .1175          350            .1494              
 
 444 - 480            .1150          375            .1476              
 
 480 - 516            .1125          400            .1459              
 
 Over 516             .1100          425            .1443              
 
                                     450            .1427              
 
                                     475            .1413              
 
                                     500            .1399              
 
                                     525            .1385              
 
                                     550            .1372              
 
The individual fund fee rate is    0    .25%. Based on the average group
net assets of the funds advised by FMR for December 1995, the annual
management fee rate would be calculated as follows:
Group Fee Rate         Individual Fund Fee Rate         Management Fee Rate   
 
 .1482%           +        0    .25%               =     .3982%                
 
On December 15, 1993, shareholders of the fund approved an increase in the
fund's individual fund fee rate from    0    .20% to    0    .25%. 
One-twelfth of this annual management fee rate is applied to the fund's net
assets averaged for the most recent month, giving a dollar amount, which is
the fee for that month.
During the fiscal years ended December 31, 1995, 1994, and 1993, FMR
received $4,282,000, $4,605,000, and $4,677,000, respectively, for its
services as investment adviser to the fund. These fees were equivalent to
   0    .40%,    0    .41%, and    0    .37%, respectively, of the average
net assets of the fund for each of those years.
FMR may, from time to time, voluntarily reimburse all or a portion of a
class's operating expenses (exclusive of interest, taxes, brokerage
commissions,    and     extraordinary expenses). FMR retains the ability to
be repaid for these expense reimbursements in the amount that expenses fall
below the limit prior to the end of the fiscal year. Expense reimbursements
by FMR will increase a class's total returns and yield and repayment of the
reimbursement by a class will lower its total returns and yield.
   Effective July 1, 1996, FMR has voluntarily agreed, subject to revision
or termination, to reimburse the Initial Class if and to the extent that
its aggregate operating expenses, including management fees, are in excess
of an annual rate of 0.75% of average net assets of the Initial Class.    
To comply with the California Code of Regulations, FMR will reimburse the
fund if and to the extent that the fund's aggregate annual operating
expenses exceed specified percentages of its average net assets. The
applicable percentages are 2 1/2% of the first $30 million, 2% of the next
$70 million, and 1 1/2% of average net assets in excess of $100 million.
When calculating the fund's expenses for purposes of this regulation, the
fund may exclude interest, taxes, brokerage commissions, and extraordinary
expenses, as well as a portion of its distribution plan expenses.
   CONTRACTS WITH FMR AFFILIATES
UMB is the transfer agent for the Initial Class. UMB has entered into a
sub-contract with FSC, an affiliate of FMR, under the terms of which FSC
performs the processing activities associated with providing transfer agent
and shareholder servicing functions for the Initial Class. Under the
sub-contract, FSC bears the expense of typesetting, printing, and mailing
prospectuses, statements of additional information, and all other reports,
notices, and statements to shareholders, with the exception of proxy
statements. FSC also pays all out-of-pocket expenses associated with
transfer agent services.
Under this arrangement, FSC receives annual account fees and asset-based
fees each based on account size and fund type for each retail account and
certain institutional accounts. With respect to certain institutional
retirement accounts, FSC receives annual account fees and asset-based fees
based on account type or fund type. These annual account fees are subject
to increase based on postal rate changes. FSC also collects small account
fees from certain accounts with balances of less than $2,500.
UMB has an additional sub-contract with FSC, pursuant to which FSC performs
the calculations necessary to determine each class's NAV and dividends and
maintains the fund's accounting records. The annual fee rates for these
pricing and bookkeeping services are based on the fund's average net
assets, specifically, .0400% for the first $500 million of average net
assets and .0200% for average net assets in excess of $500 million. The fee
is limited to a minimum of $60,000 and a maximum of $800,000 per year.
Pricing and bookkeeping fees, including reimbursement for out-of-pocket
expenses, paid to FSC for fiscal 1995, 1994, and 1993 were $346,000,
$362,000, and $358,000, respectively. The transfer agent fee and charges
and pricing and bookkeeping fees described above are paid to FSC by UMB,
which is entitled to reimbursement from the appropriate class or the fund,
as applicable, for these expenses.
The fund has a distribution agreement with FDC, a Massachusetts corporation
organized on July 18, 1960. FDC is a broker-dealer registered under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and is a member of the National Association
of Securities Dealers, Inc. The distribution agreement calls for FDC to use
all reasonable efforts, consistent with its other business, to secure
purchasers for shares of the fund, which are continuously offered.
Promotional and administrative expenses in connection with the offer and
sale of Initial Class shares are paid by FMR.    
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN
The Trustees have approved a Distribution and Service Plan on behalf of the
Initial Class (the Plan) pursuant to Rule 12b-1 under the 1940 Act (the
Rule). The Rule provides in substance that a mutual fund may not engage
directly or indirectly in financing any activity that is primarily intended
to result in the sale of shares of a fund except pursuant to a plan
approved on behalf of the fund under the Rule. The Plan, as approved by the
Trustees, allows the Initial Class and FMR to incur certain expenses that
might be considered to constitute indirect payment by the fund of
distribution expenses.
Under the Plan, if the payment of management fees by the fund to FMR is
deemed to be indirect financing by the fund of the distribution of Initial
Class shares, such payment is authorized by the Plan. The Plan also
specifically recognizes that FMR, either directly or through FDC, may use
its management fee revenue, past profits, or other resources, without
limitation, to pay promotional and administrative expenses in connection
with the offer and sale of Initial Class shares of the fund. In addition,
the Plan provides that FMR may use its resources, including its management
fee revenues, to make payments to third parties that assist in selling
Initial Class shares of the fund, or to third parties, including banks,
that render shareholder support services.    Effective January 1, 1996, the
Trustees have not authorized such payments.    
Payments made by FMR to third parties    on behalf of the Initial Class
    during the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995 amounted to $5,000.
Prior to approving the Plan, the Trustees carefully considered all
pertinent factors relating to the implementation of the Plan, and have
determined that there is a reasonable likelihood that the Plan will benefit
the Initial Class and its shareholders. In particular, the Trustees noted
that the Plan does not authorize payments by the Initial Class other than
those made to FMR under its management contract with the fund. To the
extent that the Plan gives FMR and FDC greater flexibility in connection
with the distribution of Initial Class shares of the fund, additional sales
of Initial Class shares may result. Furthermore, certain shareholder
support services may be provided more effectively under the Plan by local
entities with whom shareholders have other relationships.
The Plan was approved by Initial Class shareholders on December 31, 1986. 
The Glass-Steagall Act generally prohibits federally and state chartered or
supervised banks from engaging in the business of underwriting, selling, or
distributing securities. Although the scope of this prohibition under the
Glass-Steagall Act has not been clearly defined by the courts or
appropriate regulatory agencies, FDC believes that the Glass-Steagall Act
should not preclude a bank from performing shareholder support services, or
servicing and recordkeeping functions. FDC intends to engage banks only to
perform such functions. However, changes in federal or state statutes and
regulations pertaining to the permissible activities of banks and their
affiliates or subsidiaries, as well as further judicial or administrative
decisions or interpretations, could prevent a bank from continuing to
perform all or a part of the contemplated services. If a bank were
prohibited from so acting, the Trustees would consider what actions, if
any, would be necessary to continue to provide efficient and effective
shareholder services. In such event, changes in the operation of the fund
might occur, including possible termination of any automatic investment or
redemption or other services then provided by the bank. It is not expected
that shareholders would suffer any adverse financial consequences as a
result of any of these occurrences. In addition, state securities laws on
this issue may differ from the interpretations of federal law expressed
herein, and banks and financial institutions may be required to register as
dealers pursuant to state law. 
The fund may execute portfolio transactions with, and purchase securities
issued by, depository institutions that receive payments under the Plan. No
preference for the instruments of such depository institutions will be
shown in the selection of investments.
DESCRIPTION OF THE TRUST
TRUST ORGANIZATION. Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund is a fund of
Fidelity Municipal Trust, an open-end management investment company
originally organized as a Maryland corporation on November 22, 1976 and
reorganized as a Massachusetts business trust on June 22, 1984, at which
time its name changed to Fidelity Municipal Bond Portfolio. On February 20,
1996, the fund's name was changed to Fidelity Municipal Bond Fund, and on
June 30, 1996, the fund's name was changed to Fidelity Advisor Municipal
Bond Fund. On March 1, 1986, the trust's name was changed to Fidelity
Municipal Trust. Currently, there are seven funds of the trust: Fidelity
Advisor Municipal Bond Fund; Fidelity Aggressive Municipal Fund; Fidelity
Insured Municipal Income Fund; Fidelity Ohio Municipal Income Fund;
Fidelity Michigan Municipal Income Fund; Fidelity Minnesota Municipal
Income Fund; and Spartan Pennsylvania Municipal Income Fund. The
Declaration of Trust permits the Trustees to create additional funds.
In the event that FMR ceases to be the investment adviser to the trust or a
fund, the right of the trust or fund to use the identifying names
"Fidelity" and "Spartan" may be withdrawn.
The assets of the trust received for the issue or sale of shares of each
fund and all income, earnings, profits, and proceeds thereof, subject only
to the rights of creditors, are especially allocated to such fund, and
constitute the underlying assets of such fund. The underlying assets of
each fund are segregated on the books of account, and are to be charged
with the liabilities with respect to such fund and with a share of the
general expenses of the trust. Expenses with respect to the trust are to be
allocated in proportion to the asset value of the respective funds, except
where allocations of direct expense can otherwise be fairly made. The
officers of the trust, subject to the general supervision of the Board of
Trustees, have the power to determine which expenses are allocable to a
given fund, or which are general or allocable to all of the funds. In the
event of the dissolution or liquidation of the trust, shareholders of each
fund are entitled to receive as a class the underlying assets of such fund
available for distribution.
SHAREHOLDER AND TRUSTEE LIABILITY. The trust is an entity of the type
commonly known as a "Massachusetts business trust." Under Massachusetts
law, shareholders of such a trust may, under certain circumstances, be held
personally liable for the obligations of the trust. The Declaration of
Trust provides that the trust shall not have any claim against shareholders
except for the payment of the purchase price of shares and requires that
each agreement, obligation, or instrument entered into or executed by the
trust or the Trustees include a provision limiting the obligations created
thereby to the trust and its assets. The Declaration of Trust provides for
indemnification out of each fund's property of any shareholder held
personally liable for the obligations of the fund. The Declaration of Trust
also provides that each fund shall, upon request, assume the defense of any
claim made against any shareholder for any act or obligation of the fund
and satisfy any judgment thereon. Thus, the risk of a shareholder incurring
financial loss on account of shareholder liability is limited to
circumstances in which a fund itself would be unable to meet its
obligations. FMR believes that, in view of the above, the risk of personal
liability to shareholders is remote.
The Declaration of Trust further provides that the Trustees, if they have
exercised reasonable care, will not be liable for any neglect or
wrongdoing, but nothing in the Declaration of Trust protects Trustees
against any liability to which they would otherwise be subject by reason of
willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, or reckless disregard of
the duties involved in the conduct of their office. Claims asserted against
one class of shares may subject the holders of another class of shares to
certain liabilities.
VOTING RIGHTS. Each fund's capital consists of shares of beneficial
interest. As a shareholder, you receive one vote for each dollar value of
net asset value you own. The Initial Class shares have no preemptive or
conversion rights; the voting and dividend rights, the right of redemption,
and the privilege of exchange are described in the Prospectus. Shares are
fully paid and nonassessable, except as set forth under the heading
"Shareholder and Trustee Liability" above. Shareholders representing 10% or
more of the trust, a fund, or a class may, as set forth in the Declaration
of Trust, call meetings of the trust, fund, or class for any purpose
related to the trust, fund, or class, as the case may be, including, in the
case of a meeting of the entire trust, the purpose of voting on removal of
one or more Trustees. The trust or any fund may be terminated upon the sale
of its assets to another open-end management investment company, or upon
liquidation and distribution of its assets, if approved by vote of the
holders of a majority of the trust or the fund, as determined by the
current value of each shareholder's investment in the fund or trust. If not
so terminated, the trust and its funds will continue indefinitely.
CUSTODIAN. UMB Bank, n.a., 1010 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, Missouri, is
custodian of the assets of the fund. The custodian is responsible for the
safekeeping of a fund's assets and the appointment of the subcustodian
banks and clearing agencies. The custodian takes no part in determining the
investment policies of a fund or in deciding which securities are purchased
or sold by a fund. However, a fund may invest in obligations of the
custodian and may purchase securities from or sell securities to the
custodian.
FMR, its officers and directors, its affiliated companies, and the Board of
Trustees may, from time to time, conduct transactions with various banks,
including banks serving as custodians for certain funds advised by FMR.
Transactions that have occurred to date include mortgages and personal and
general business loans. In the judgment of FMR, the terms and conditions of
those transactions were not influenced by existing or potential custodial
or other fund relationships.
AUDITOR.    Coopers & Lybrand, L.L.P., One Post Office Square, Boston, MA,
    serves as the trust's independent accountant. The auditor examines
financial statements for the fund and provides other audit, tax, and
related services.
FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
The fund's financial statements and financial highlights for the fiscal
year ended December 31, 1995, are included in the fund's Annual Report,
which is a separate report supplied with this SAI. The fund's financial
statements and financial highlights are incorporated herein by reference. 
APPENDIX
DOLLAR-WEIGHTED AVERAGE MATURITY is derived by multiplying the value of
each investment by the time remaining to its maturity, adding these
calculations, and then dividing the total by the value of the fund's
portfolio. An obligation's maturity is typically determined on a stated
final maturity basis, although there are some exceptions to this rule.
For example, if it is probable that the issuer of an instrument will take
advantage of a maturity-shortening device, such as a call, refunding, or
redemption provision, the date on which the instrument will probably be
called, refunded, or redeemed may be considered to be its maturity date.
When a municipal bond issuer has committed to call an issue of bonds and
has established an independent escrow account that is sufficient to, and is
pledged to, refund that issue, the number of days to maturity for the
prerefunded bond is considered to be the number of days to the announced
call date of the bonds.
FIDELITY MUNICIPAL TRUST
 
 
PART C - OTHER INFORMATION
Item 24. Financial Statements and Exhibits
 (a)     Financial Statements and Financial Highlights, included in the
Annual Report for Fidelity Municipal Trust: Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond
Fund (formerly  Fidelity Municipal Bond Fund) for the fiscal year ended
December 31, 1995 are incorporated by reference into the fund's Statement
of Additional Information, and were filed February 12, 1996 for Fidelity
Municipal Trust (File No. 811-2720), pursuant to Rule 30d-1 under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, and are incorporated herein by reference. 
 (b)     Exhibits. 
 1. Declaration of Trust of Registrant, dated as of March 17, 1994, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 1 to Post-Effective Amendment
No. 67.
 2. Bylaws of the Trust, as amended, are incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 2(a) to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318)
Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
 3. Not applicable.
 4. Not applicable.
 5. (a) Management Contract, dated January 1, 1994, between Fidelity
Aggressive Tax-Free Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Aggressive
Municipal Fund) and Fidelity Management & Research Company  is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 5(a) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (b) Management Contract, dated January 1, 1994, between Fidelity
Municipal Bond Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Advisor Municipal
Bond Fund) and Fidelity Management & Research Company is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 5(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (c) Management Contract, dated January 1, 1994, between Fidelity Insured
Tax-Free Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Insured Municipal Income
Fund) and Fidelity Management & Research Company is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 5(c) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 69.
  (d) Management Contract, dated January 1, 1994, between Fidelity Michigan
Tax-Free High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Michigan
Municipal Income Fund) and Fidelity Management & Research Company is
incorporated herein by reference as Exhibit 5(d) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 64.
  (e) Management Contract, dated January 1, 1994, between Fidelity
Minnesota Tax-Free Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Minnesota
Municipal Income Fund) and Fidelity Management & Research Company is
incorporated herein by reference as Exhibit 5(e) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 64.
  (f) Management Contract, dated January 1, 1994, between Fidelity Ohio
Tax-Free High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Ohio Municipal
Income Fund) and Fidelity Management & Research Company is incorporated
herein by reference as Exhibit 5(f) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 64.
  (g) Management Contract, dated August 1, 1990, between Spartan
Pennsylvania Municipal High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Spartan
Pennsylvania Municipal Income Fund) and Fidelity Management & Research
Company is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 5(g) to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
 6. (a) General Distribution Agreement between Fidelity Insured Tax-Free
Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Insured Municipal Income Fund) and
Fidelity Distributors Corporation, dated April 1, 1987, is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(a) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (b) General Distribution Agreement between Fidelity Aggressive Tax-Free
Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Aggressive Municipal Fund) and
Fidelity Distributors Corporation, dated April 1, 1987, is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 70.
  (c) General Distribution Agreement between Fidelity Municipal Bond
Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund) and
Fidelity Distributors Corporation, dated April 1, 1987, is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(c) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (d) General Distribution Agreement between Fidelity Ohio Tax-Free High
Yield Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Ohio Municipal Income Fund)
and Fidelity Distributors Corporation, dated April 1, 1987, is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(d) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (e) General Distribution Agreement between Fidelity Michigan Tax-Free
High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Michigan Municipal Income
Fund) and Fidelity Distributors Corporation, dated April 1, 1987, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 6(e) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 67.
  (f) General Distribution Agreement between Fidelity Minnesota Tax-Free
Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Minnesota Municipal Income Fund) and
Fidelity Distributors Corporation, dated April 1, 1987, is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 6(f) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (g) General Distribution Agreement between Fidelity Pennsylvania
Municipal High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Spartan Pennsylvania
Municipal Income Fund) and Fidelity Distributors Corporation, dated April
1, 1987, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 6(g) to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (h) Amendment to General Distribution Agreement, dated January 1, 1988,
between Fidelity Municipal Trust: Fidelity Insured Tax-Free Portfolio
(currently known as Fidelity Insured Municipal Income Fund); Fidelity
Aggressive Tax-Free Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Aggressive
Municipal Fund); Fidelity Municipal Bond Portfolio (currently known as
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund); Fidelity Ohio Tax-Free High Yield
Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Ohio Municipal Income Fund);
Fidelity Michigan Tax-Free High Yield (currently known as Fidelity Michigan
Municipal Income Fund); Fidelity Minnesota Tax-Free Portfolio (currently
known as Fidelity Minnesota Municipal Income Fund); and Fidelity
Pennsylvania Municipal High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Spartan
Pennsylvania Municipal Income Fund) and Fidelity Distributors Corporation
is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 6(h) to Post-Effective
Amendment No. 67.
  (i) Form of Bank Agency Agreement (most recently revised May 1994) is
electronically filed herein as Exhibit 6(i).
  (j) Form of Selling Dealer Agreement (most recently revised May 1994) is
electronically filed herein as Exhibit 6(j).
  (k) Form of Selling Dealer Agreement for Bank Related Transactions (most
recently revised June 1994) is electronically filed herein as Exhibit 6(k).
 7. (a) Retirement Plan for Non-Interested Person Trustees, Directors, or
General Partners, effective November 1, 1989, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 7 to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318)
Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
 8. (a) Custodian Agreement, Appendix A, Appendix B, and Appendix C, dated
December 1, 1994, between UMB Bank, n.a. and the Registrant is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 8 to Fidelity California Municipal Trust's
(File No. 2-83367) Post-Effective Amendment No. 28.
 
 9.  None.
 10.  None.
 11.  Consent of Coopers & Lybrand  L.L.P. is electronically filed herein
as Exhibit 11. 
 12.  None.
 13.  None.
 14. (a) Fidelity Individual Retirement Account Custodial Agreement and
Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(a) to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No.
2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (b) Fidelity Institutional Individual Retirement Account Custodial
Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is incorporated
herein by reference to Exhibit 14(d) to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File
No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (c) National Financial Services Corporation Individual Retirement
Account Custodial Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in
effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(h) to Fidelity
Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (d) Fidelity Portfolio Advisory Services Individual Retirement Account
Custodial Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(i) to Fidelity Union Street
Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (e) Fidelity 403(b)(7) Custodial Account Agreement, as currently in
effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(e) to Fidelity
Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (f) National Financial Services Corporation Defined Contribution
Retirement Plan and Trust Agreement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(k) to Fidelity Union Street
Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective Amendment No. 87.
     (g) The CORPORATEplan for Retirement Profit Sharing/401K Plan, as
currently in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(l)
to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective
Amendment No. 87.
     (h) The CORPORATEplan for Retirement Money Purchase Pension Plan, as
currently in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(m)
to Fidelity Union Street Trust's (File No. 2-50318) Post-Effective
Amendment No. 87.
     (i) Fidelity Investments Section 403(b)(7) Individual Custodial
Account Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(f) to Fidelity Commonwealth
Trust's (File No. 2-52322) Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
     (j) Plymouth Investments Defined Contribution Retirement Plan and
Trust Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(o) to Fidelity Commonwealth Trust's (File No.
2-52322) Post-Effective Amendment No. 57.
     (k) The Fidelity Prototype Defined Benefit Pension Plan and Trust
Basic Plan Document and Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(d) to Fidelity Securities
Fund's (File No. 2-93601) Post-Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (l) The Institutional Prototype Plan Basic Plan Document, Standardized
Adoption Agreement, and Non-Standardized Adoption Agreement, as currently
in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(o) to Fidelity
Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601) Post-Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (m) The CORPORATEplan for Retirement 100SM Profit Sharing/401(k) Basic
Plan Document, Standardized Adoption Agreement, and Non-Standardized
Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(f) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601)
Post-Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (n) The Fidelity Investments 401(a) Prototype Plan for Tax-Exempt
Employers Basic Plan Document, Standardized Profit Sharing Plan Adoption
Agreement, Non-Standardized Discretionary Contribution Plan No. 002
Adoption Agreement, and Non-Standardized Discretionary Contribution Plan
No. 003 Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein
by reference to Exhibit 14(g) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No.
2-93601) Post-Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (o) Fidelity Investments 403(b) Sample Plan Basic Plan Document and
Adoption Agreement, as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by
reference to Exhibit 14(p) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601)
Post-Effective Amendment No. 33.
     (p) Fidelity Defined Contribution Retirement Plan and Trust Agreement,
as currently in effect, is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit
14(c) to Fidelity Securities Fund's (File No. 2-93601) Post-Effective
Amendment No. 33.
     (q) Form of Fidelity Advisor Funds Individual Retirement Account
Custodial Agreement and Disclosure Statement, as currently in effect, is
incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 14(a) to Fidelity Advisor
Series II Trust's (File No. 33-6516) Post-Effective Amendment No. 20.
     (r) Form of Plymouth Investments Fidelity Master Plan for Savings and
Investments:  Plan and Trust Document, Adoption Agreement and Summary Plan
Description, as currently in effect, are incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 14(c) to Fidelity Advisor Series II Trust's (File No. 33-6516)
Post-Effective Amendment No. 13.
 15. (a) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Insured Tax-Free Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Insured Municipal
Income Fund) is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 15(a) to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (b) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Ohio Tax-Free High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Ohio
Municipal Income Fund) is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 15(b)
to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (c) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Michigan Tax-Free High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity
Michigan Municipal Income Fund) is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 15(c) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (d) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Minnesota Tax-Free Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Minnesota
Municipal Income Fund) is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 15(d)
to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (e) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Pennsylvania Municipal High Yield Portfolio (currently known as Spartan
Pennsylvania Municipal Income Fund) is incorporated herein by reference to
Exhibit 15(e) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (f) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Municipal Bond Portfolio (currently known as Initial Class shares of
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund) is incorporated herein by reference
to Exhibit 15(f) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 67.
  (g) Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for Fidelity
Aggressive Tax-Free Portfolio (currently known as Fidelity Aggressive
Municipal Fund) is incorporated herein by reference to Exhibit 15(g) to
Post-Effective Amendment No. 43.
  (h) Form of Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for
Class A shares of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund is electronically
filed herein as Exhibit 15(h).
  (i) Form of Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for
Class B shares of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund is electronically
filed herein as Exhibit 15(i).
  (j) Form of Distribution and Service Plan pursuant to Rule 12b-1 for
Institutional Class shares of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund is
electronically filed herein as Exhibit 15(j). 
 16. (a) Schedule for computation of performance calculations for Fidelity
Municipal Bond Fund was electronically filed and is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 16(a) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 70.
  (b) Schedule for computation of adjusted net asset values for Fidelity
Municipal Bond Fund was electronically filed and is incorporated by
reference to Exhibit 16(b) to Post-Effective Amendment No. 70.
 17.  A Financial Data Schedule for Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund is
electronically filed herein as Exhibit 17. 
 18.  Form of Rule 18f-3 Plan for Advisor Funds is electronically filed
herein as Exhibit 18.
Item 25. Persons Controlled by or under Common Control with Registrant
 The Board of Trustees of the Registrant is substantially the same as the
boards of other funds advised by FMR, each of which has Fidelity Management
& Research Company as its investment adviser. In addition, the officers of
these funds are substantially identical.  Nonetheless, Registrant takes the
position that it is not under common control with these other funds since
the power residing in the respective boards and officers arises as the
result of an official position with the respective funds.
Item 26. Number of Holders of Securities
March 31, 1996
Title of Class:  Shares of Beneficial Interest
      Title of Series:   Number of Record Holders   
 
                                                              
 
Fidelity Municipal Bond Fund:  (formerly Fidelity       850   
Municipal Bond Portfolio)                                     
 
                                                              
 
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund:  Class A          0     
                                                              
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund:  Class B          0     
                                                              
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund:  Institutional    0     
Class                                                         
 
                                                              
 
Item 27. Indemnification
 Article XI, Section 2 of the Declaration of Trust sets forth the
reasonable and fair means for determining whether indemnification shall be
provided to any past or present Trustee or officer. It states that the
Registrant shall indemnify any present or past Trustee or officer to the
fullest extent permitted by law against liability and all expenses
reasonably incurred by him in connection with any claim, action, suit, or
proceeding in which he is involved by virtue of his service as a Trustee,
an officer, or both. Additionally, amounts paid or incurred in settlement
of such matters are covered by this indemnification. Indemnification will
not be provided in certain circumstances, however. These include instances
of willful misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, and reckless disregard
of the duties involved in the conduct of the particular office involved.
 Pursuant to Section 11 of the Distribution Agreement, the Registrant
agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Distributor and each of its
directors and officers and each person, if any, who controls the
Distributor within the meaning of Section 15 of the 1933 Act against any
loss, liability, claim, damages or expense arising by reason of any person
acquiring any shares, based upon the ground that the registration
statement, Prospectus, Statement of Additional Information, shareholder
reports or other information filed or made public by the Registrant
included a materially misleading statement or omission. However, the
Registrant does not agree to indemnify the Distributor or hold it harmless
to the extent that the statement or omission was made in reliance upon, and
in conformity with, information furnished to the Registrant by or on behalf
of the Distributor. The Registrant does not agree to indemnify the parties
against any liability to which they would be subject by reason of willful
misfeasance, bad faith, gross negligence, and reckless disregard of the
obligations and duties under the Distribution Agreement.
 Pursuant to the agreement by which Fidelity Service Company ("Service") is
appointed sub-transfer agent, the Transfer Agent agrees to indemnify
Service for its losses, claims, damages, liabilities and expenses to the
extent the Transfer Agent is entitled to and receives indemnification from
the Registrant for the same events. Under the Transfer Agency Agreement,
the Registrant agrees to indemnify and hold the Transfer Agent harmless
against any losses, claims, damages, liabilities, or expenses resulting
from:
 (1) any claim, demand, action or suit brought by any person other than the
Registrant, which names the Transfer Agent and/or the Registrant as a party
and is not based on and does not result from the Transfer Agent's willful
misfeasance, bad faith, negligence or reckless disregard of its duties, and
arises out of or in connection with the Transfer Agent's performance under
the Transfer Agency Agreement; or
 (2) any claim, demand, action or suit (except to the extent contributed to
by the Transfer Agent's willful misfeasance, bad faith, negligence or
reckless disregard of its duties) which results from the negligence of the
Registrant, or from the Transfer Agent's acting upon any instruction(s)
reasonably believed by it to have been executed or communicated by any
person duly authorized by the Registrant, or as a result of the Transfer
Agent's acting in reliance upon advice reasonably believed by the Transfer
Agent to have been given by counsel for the Registrant, or as a result of
the Transfer Agent's acting in reliance upon any instrument or stock
certificate reasonably believed by it to have been genuine and signed,
countersigned or executed by the proper person.
Item 28. Business and Other Connections of Investment Adviser
 (1)  FIDELITY MANAGEMENT & RESEARCH COMPANY
 FMR serves as investment adviser to a number of other investment
companies.  The directors and officers of the Adviser have held, during the
past two fiscal years, the following positions of a substantial nature.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                    <C>                                                          
Edward C. Johnson 3d   Chairman of the Executive Committee of FMR; President        
                       and Chief Executive Officer of FMR Corp.; Chairman of        
                       the Board and a Director of FMR, FMR Corp., FMR Texas        
                       Inc., Fidelity Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and        
                       Fidelity Management & Research (Far East) Inc.; President    
                       and Trustee of funds advised by FMR.                         
 
                                                                                    
 
J. Gary Burkhead       President of FMR; Managing Director of FMR Corp.;            
                       President and a Director of FMR Texas Inc., Fidelity         
                       Management & Research (U.K.) Inc., and Fidelity              
                       Management & Research (Far East) Inc.; Senior Vice           
                       President and Trustee of funds advised by FMR.               
 
                                                                                    
 
Peter S. Lynch         Vice Chairman and Director of FMR.                           
 
                                                                                    
 
Robert Beckwitt        Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                    
 
David Breazzano        Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                       FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Stephan Campbell       Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
Dwight Churchill       Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
William Danoff         Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                       FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Scott DeSano           Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
Penelope Dobkin        Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
Larry Domash           Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
George Domolky         Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                       FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Robert K. Duby         Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                    
 
Margaret L. Eagle      Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
Kathryn L. Eklund      Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                    
 
Richard B. Fentin      Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised    
                       by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                    
 
Michael S. Gray        Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                    
 
Lawrence Greenberg     Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                    
 
Barry A. Greenfield    Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
William J. Hayes       Senior Vice President of FMR; Equity Division Leader.        
 
                                                                                    
 
Robert Haber           Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                    
 
Richard Haberman       Senior Vice President of FMR (1993).                         
 
                                                                                    
 
Daniel Harmetz         Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                    
 
Ellen S. Heller        Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                    
 
John Hickling          Vice President of FMR (1993) and of funds advised by    
                       FMR.                                                    
 
 
 
</TABLE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                         <C>                                                          
                                                                                         
 
Robert F. Hill              Vice President of FMR; Director of Technical Research.       
 
                                                                                         
 
Curtis Hollingsworth        Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Stephen P. Jonas            Treasurer and Vice President of FMR (1993)); Treasurer of    
                            FMR Texas Inc. (1993), Fidelity Management & Research        
                            (U.K.) Inc. (1993), and Fidelity Management & Research       
                            (Far East) Inc. (1993).                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
David B. Jones              Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Steven Kaye                 Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Frank Knox                  Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert A. Lawrence          Senior Vice President of FMR (1993); High Income             
                            Division Leader.                                             
 
                                                                                         
 
Alan Leifer                 Vice President of FMR and of a fund advised by FMR.          
 
                                                                                         
 
Harris Leviton              Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Bradford E. Lewis           Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                         
 
Malcolm W. MacNaught III    Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert H. Morrison          Vice President of FMR; Director of Equity Trading.           
 
                                                                                         
 
David Murphy                Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                         
 
Andrew Offit                Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Judy Pagliuca               Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Jacques Perold              Vice President of FMR.                                       
 
                                                                                         
 
Anne Punzak                 Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR.           
 
                                                                                         
 
Lee Sandwen                 Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Patricia A. Satterthwaite   Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Thomas T. Soviero           Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Richard Spillane            Vice President of FMR; Senior Vice President and Director    
                            of Operations and Compliance of FMR U.K. (1993).             
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert E. Stansky           Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of funds advised     
                            by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
Gary L. Swayze              Vice President of FMR and of funds advised by FMR;           
                            Tax-Free Fixed-Income Group Leader.                          
 
                                                                                         
 
Thomas Sweeney              Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
Beth F. Terrana             Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of funds advised     
                            by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
Joel Tillinghast            Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised by        
                            FMR.                                                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Robert Tucket               Vice President of FMR (1993).                                
 
                                                                                         
 
George A. Vanderheiden      Senior Vice President of FMR; Vice President of funds        
                            advised by FMR; Growth Group Leader.                         
 
                                                                                         
 
Jeffrey Vinik               Senior Vice President of FMR (1993) and of a fund advised    
                            by FMR.                                                      
 
                                                                                         
 
Arthur S. Loring            Senior Vice President (1993), Clerk, and General Counsel     
                            of FMR; Vice President, Legal of FMR Corp.; Secretary of     
                            funds advised by FMR.                                        
 
</TABLE>
 
Item 29. Principal Underwriters
(a) Fidelity Distributors Corporation (FDC) acts as distributor for most
funds advised by FMR.
(b)                                                                  
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                   <C>                      <C>
Name and Principal     Positions and Offices   Positions and Offices   
 
Business Address*      With Underwriter        With Registrant         
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d   Director                   Trustee and President   
 
Michael Mlinac         Director                   None                    
 
Mark Peterson          Director                   None                    
 
Neal Litvak            President                  None                    
 
Arthur S. Loring       Vice President and Clerk   Secretary               
 
Caron Ketchum          Treasurer and Controller   None                    
 
Gary Greenstein        Assistant Treasurer        None                    
 
Jay Freedman           Assistant Clerk            None                    
 
Linda Holland          Compliance Officer         None                    
</TABLE>
* 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA
 (c) Not applicable.
Item 30. Location of Accounts and Records
 All accounts, books, and other documents required to be maintained by
Section 31a of the 1940 Act and the Rules promulgated thereunder are
maintained by Fidelity Management & Research Company or Fidelity Service
Co., 82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA 02109, or the funds' custodian UMB
Bank, n.a., 1010 Grand Avenue, Kansas City, MO 64106.
Item 31. Management Services
 Not applicable.
Item 32. Undertakings
(1) The Registrant on behalf of Fidelity Aggressive Municipal Fund,
Fidelity Municipal Income Fund, Fidelity Insured Municipal Income Fund,
Fidelity Ohio Municipal Income Fund, Fidelity Michigan Municipal Income
Fund, Fidelity Minnesota Municipal Income Fund, and Spartan Pennsylvania
Municipal Income Fund, provided the information required by Item 5A is
contained in the annual report, undertakes to furnish each person to whom a
prospectus has been delivered, upon their request and without charge, a
copy of the Registrant's latest annual report to shareholders.
SIGNATURES
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933 and the
Investment Company Act of 1940, the Registrant certifies that it meets all
of the requirements for the effectiveness of this Registration Statement
pursuant to Rule 485(b) under the Securities Act of 1933 and has duly
caused this Post-Effective Amendment No. 72 to the Registration Statement
to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized,
in the City of Boston, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, on the 24th
day of June 1996.
      FIDELITY MUNICIPAL TRUST
      By /s/Edward C. Johnson 3d (dagger)
        Edward C. Johnson 3d, President
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this
Registration Statement has been signed below by the following persons in
the capacities and on the dates indicated.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                               <C>                             <C>              
     (Signature)                  (Title)                         (Date)   
 
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d(dagger)   President and Trustee           June 24, 1996    
 
    Edward C. Johnson 3d          (Principal Executive Officer)                    
 
/s/Kenneth A. Rathgeber           Treasurer                       June 24, 1996   
 
    Kenneth A. Rathgeber               
 
/s/J. Gary Burkhead               Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
    J. Gary Burkhead               
 
                                                           
/s/Ralph F. Cox              *    Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
   Ralph F. Cox               
 
                                                       
/s/Phyllis Burke Davis   *        Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
    Phyllis Burke Davis               
 
                                                          
/s/Richard J. Flynn         *     Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
    Richard J. Flynn               
 
                                                          
/s/E. Bradley Jones         *     Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
    E. Bradley Jones               
 
                                                            
/s/Donald J. Kirk             *   Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
    Donald J. Kirk               
 
                                                            
/s/Peter S. Lynch             *   Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
    Peter S. Lynch               
 
                                                       
/s/Edward H. Malone      *        Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
   Edward H. Malone                
 
                                                     
/s/Marvin L. Mann_____*           Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
   Marvin L. Mann                
 
/s/Gerald C. McDonough*           Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
    Gerald C. McDonough               
 
/s/Thomas R. Williams    *        Trustee                         June 24, 1996   
 
   Thomas R. Williams               
                                                                                   
 
</TABLE>
 
 
(dagger) Signatures affixed by J. Gary Burkhead pursuant to a power of
attorney dated December 15, 1994 and filed herewith.
* Signature affixed by Robert C. Hacker pursuant to a power of attorney
dated December 15, 1994 and filed herewith.
POWER OF ATTORNEY
 We, the undersigned Directors, Trustees or General Partners, as the case
may be, of the following investment companies:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                   <C>                                               
Fidelity Advisor Annuity Fund         Fidelity Income Fund                              
Fidelity Advisor Series I             Fidelity Institutional Trust                      
Fidelity Advisor Series II            Fidelity Investment Trust                         
Fidelity Advisor Series III           Fidelity Magellan Fund                            
Fidelity Advisor Series IV            Fidelity Massachusetts Municipal Trust            
Fidelity Advisor Series V             Fidelity Mt. Vernon Street Trust                  
Fidelity Advisor Series VI            Fidelity Municipal Trust                          
Fidelity Advisor Series VII           Fidelity New York Municipal Trust                 
Fidelity Advisor Series VIII          Fidelity Puritan Trust                            
Fidelity California Municipal Trust   Fidelity School Street Trust                      
Fidelity Capital Trust                Fidelity Securities Fund                          
Fidelity Charles Street Trust         Fidelity Select Portfolios                        
Fidelity Commonwealth Trust           Fidelity Sterling Performance Portfolio, L.P.     
Fidelity Congress Street Fund         Fidelity Summer Street Trust                      
Fidelity Contrafund                   Fidelity Trend Fund                               
Fidelity Corporate Trust              Fidelity U.S. Investments-Bond Fund, L.P.         
Fidelity Court Street Trust           Fidelity U.S. Investments-Government Securities   
Fidelity Deutsche Mark Performance       Fund, L.P.                                     
  Portfolio, L.P.                     Fidelity Union Street Trust                       
Fidelity Devonshire Trust             Fidelity Yen Performance Portfolio, L.P.          
Fidelity Exchange Fund                Spartan U.S. Treasury Money Market                
Fidelity Financial Trust                 Fund                                           
Fidelity Fixed-Income Trust           Variable Insurance Products Fund                  
Fidelity Government Securities Fund   Variable Insurance Products Fund II               
Fidelity Hastings Street Trust                                                          
 
</TABLE>
 
plus any other investment company for which Fidelity Management & Research
Company acts as investment adviser and for which the undersigned
individuals serve as Board Members (collectively, the "Funds"), hereby
severally constitute and appoint Arthur J. Brown, Arthur C. Delibert,
Robert C. Hacker, Richard M. Phillips, Dana L. Platt and Stephanie A.
Djinis, each of them singly, our true and lawful attorneys-in-fact, with
full power of substitution, and with full power to each of them, to sign
for us and in our names in the appropriate capacities, all Pre-Effective
Amendments to any Registration Statements of the Funds, any and all
subsequent Post-Effective Amendments to said Registration Statements, any
Registration Statements on Form N-14, and any supplements or other
instruments in connection therewith, and generally to do all such things in
our names and behalf in connection therewith as said attorneys-in-fact deem
necessary or appropriate, to comply with the provisions of the Securities
Act of 1933 and Investment Company Act of 1940, and all related
requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission, hereby ratifying
and confirming all that said attorneys-in-fact or their substitutes may do
or cause to be done by virtue hereof.
 WITNESS our hands on this fifteenth day of December, 1994.
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d         /s/Donald J. Kirk              
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d            Donald J. Kirk                 
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/J. Gary Burkhead             /s/Peter S. Lynch              
 
J. Gary Burkhead                Peter S. Lynch                 
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/Ralph F. Cox                 /s/Marvin L. Mann              
 
Ralph F. Cox                    Marvin L. Mann                 
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/Phyllis Burke Davis          /s/Edward H. Malone            
 
Phyllis Burke Davis             Edward H. Malone               
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/Richard J. Flynn             /s/Gerald C. McDonough         
 
Richard J. Flynn                Gerald C. McDonough            
 
                                                               
 
                                                               
 
/s/E. Bradley Jones             /s/Thomas R. Williams          
 
E. Bradley Jones                Thomas R. Williams             
 
POWER OF ATTORNEY
 I, the undersigned President and Director, Trustee or General Partner, as
the case may be, of the following investment companies:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
<S>                                   <C>                                               
Fidelity Advisor Annuity Fund         Fidelity Institutional Trust                      
Fidelity Advisor Series I             Fidelity Investment Trust                         
Fidelity Advisor Series II            Fidelity Magellan Fund                            
Fidelity Advisor Series III           Fidelity Massachusetts Municipal Trust            
Fidelity Advisor Series IV            Fidelity Money Market Trust                       
Fidelity Advisor Series V             Fidelity Mt. Vernon Street Trust                  
Fidelity Advisor Series VI            Fidelity Municipal Trust                          
Fidelity Advisor Series VII           Fidelity New York Municipal Trust                 
Fidelity Advisor Series VIII          Fidelity Puritan Trust                            
Fidelity California Municipal Trust   Fidelity School Street Trust                      
Fidelity Capital Trust                Fidelity Securities Fund                          
Fidelity Charles Street Trust         Fidelity Select Portfolios                        
Fidelity Commonwealth Trust           Fidelity Sterling Performance Portfolio, L.P.     
Fidelity Congress Street Fund         Fidelity Summer Street Trust                      
Fidelity Contrafund                   Fidelity Trend Fund                               
Fidelity Corporate Trust              Fidelity U.S. Investments-Bond Fund, L.P.         
Fidelity Court Street Trust           Fidelity U.S. Investments-Government Securities   
Fidelity Destiny Portfolios              Fund, L.P.                                     
Fidelity Deutsche Mark Performance    Fidelity Union Street Trust                       
  Portfolio, L.P.                     Fidelity Yen Performance Portfolio, L.P.          
Fidelity Devonshire Trust             Spartan U.S. Treasury Money Market                
Fidelity Exchange Fund                   Fund                                           
Fidelity Financial Trust              Variable Insurance Products Fund                  
Fidelity Fixed-Income Trust           Variable Insurance Products Fund II               
Fidelity Government Securities Fund                                                     
Fidelity Hastings Street Trust                                                          
Fidelity Income Fund                                                                    
 
</TABLE>
 
plus any other investment company for which Fidelity Management & Research
Company acts as investment adviser and for which the undersigned individual
serves as President and Board Member (collectively, the "Funds"), hereby
severally constitute and appoint J. Gary Burkhead, my true and lawful
attorney-in-fact, with full power of substitution, and with full power to
sign for me and in my name in the appropriate capacity, all Pre-Effective
Amendments to any Registration Statements of the Funds, any and all
subsequent Post-Effective Amendments to said Registration Statements, any
Registration Statements on Form N-14, and any supplements or other
instruments in connection therewith, and generally to do all such things in
my name and behalf in connection therewith as said attorney-in-fact deem
necessary or appropriate, to comply with the provisions of the Securities
Act of 1933 and Investment Company Act of 1940, and all related
requirements of the Securities and Exchange Commission.  I hereby ratify
and confirm all that said attorneys-in-fact or their substitutes may do or
cause to be done by virtue hereof.
 WITNESS my hand on the date set forth below.
/s/Edward C. Johnson 3d   December 15, 1994   
 
Edward C. Johnson 3d                          
 
 

 
 
          Exhibit 6(i)
BANK AGENCY AGREEMENT
 We (Fidelity Distributors Corporation) are distributors of the Fidelity
Advisor Funds and the Fidelity Funds (the "Portfolios").  You
(_____________________________________) are a division or affiliate of
(________________) ("Bank"), and desire to make Portfolio shares available
to your customers upon the following terms and conditions:
1. As used herein the following terms shall have the meaning hereinafter
set forth (unless a different meaning is plainly required by the context):
 (a) "Fidelity Advisor Funds" shall mean the open-end investment companies,
series, or (in the case of companies or series offering multiple classes of
shares) classes of one or more of the foregoing, the shares of which from
time to time shall be offered by us as principal underwriter to you
hereunder and which are designated as such on Schedule A, as amended by us
from time to time upon notice to you.  This Agreement shall apply only to
such companies, series, or classes so designated and only such companies,
series or classes shall be considered to be Fidelity Advisor Funds.
 (b) "Fidelity Funds" shall mean the open-end investment companies, series
or (in the case of companies or series offering multiple classes of shares)
classes of one or more of the foregoing, the shares of which from time to
time shall be offered by us as principal underwriter to you hereunder and
which are designated as such on Schedule B, as amended by us from time to
time upon notice to you.  This Agreement shall apply only to such
companies, series, or classes so designated and only such companies, series
or classes shall be considered to be Fidelity Funds.
 (c) "Portfolio" shall mean any one of the Fidelity Advisor Funds or
Fidelity Funds.
 (d) "Transfer Agent" shall mean (i) with respect to the Fidelity Advisor
Funds, the person designated on Schedule C and appointed by you pursuant to
paragraph 4 to provide the services described under such paragraph; and
(ii) with respect to the Fidelity Funds, the transfer agent of such
Fidelity Fund.
2. (a)   In respect of all sales of Portfolio shares to your customers for
which you act as agent, (i) such shares shall be sold at the applicable
public offering price, giving effect, where applicable, to cumulative or
quantity discounts or other purchase programs, plans or services as
described in the then current prospectus of the Portfolio whose shares are
being sold and you shall transmit payment for such shares in accordance
with paragraph 3; (ii) your customer's transactions will be executed only
upon your authorization, and on all such transactions you shall be acting
solely as agent, upon the order and at the request of your customers,
without recourse to you, and such transactions shall be for the account of
your customers and not for your account; (iii) your compensation for acting
as agent with respect to sales shall be as set forth in the applicable
schedules issued by us and in effect at the time of the sale or as set
forth in the then current prospectus.  Such compensation schedules are
subject to change or discontinuance by us from time to time as set forth in
paragraph 8 below.
 (b) In the case of a Portfolio which has adopted a plan pursuant to Rule
12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (a "Plan"), we may elect
from time to time to make distribution payments or service payments to you
under such Plan.  In the case of a Portfolio that has no currently
effective Plan, we or Fidelity Management & Research Company may elect to
make distribution payments or service payments to you from our own funds. 
Any such distribution payments or service payments shall be made in the
amount and manner set forth in the applicable schedule of distribution
payments or service payments issued by us and then in effect or as set
forth in the then current prospectus.  Such schedule of distribution
payments or service payments may be changed or discontinued by us from time
to time and shall be in effect with respect to a Portfolio which has a Plan
only so long as such Portfolio's Plan remains in effect.
3. The placing of orders with us shall be governed by instructions which we
shall issue from time to time.  Payment for shares shall be made in New
York or Boston Clearing House funds in accordance with such instructions,
but in no event to be received by us later than five business days (as
defined in the Portfolio's current prospectus) after our acceptance of the
order.
4. (a)  The Fidelity Advisor Funds offer you the option of transacting
business with such funds either through the fund's own transfer agent or
through a third party record keeper.  You may designate your selection with
respect to the Fidelity Advisor Funds on Schedule C.
 (b)  You appoint the Transfer Agent for each Portfolio as your agent to
execute customers' purchase, sale, transfer, or redemption orders
("Transactions") in Portfolio shares in accordance with the terms and
provisions of any account, program, plan or service established or used by
your customers and to confirm each such Transaction to your customers on
your behalf on a fully disclosed basis, and at the time of the Transaction,
you guarantee the legal capacity of your customers and any co-owners of
such shares so transacting in such shares.
 (c) You may instruct the Transfer Agent to register shares purchased in
your name and account as nominee for your customers, in which event all
prospectuses, proxy statements, periodic reports and other printed material
will be sent to you and all confirmations and other communications to
shareholders will be transmitted to you.  You shall be responsible for
forwarding such printed material, confirmations and communications, or the
information contained therein, to all customers for whom you hold such
shares as nominee.  However, we or the Transfer Agent on behalf of itself
or the Portfolios shall be responsible for the costs associated with your
forwarding such printed material, confirmations and communications and
shall reimburse you in full for such costs.  You shall also be responsible
for complying with all reporting and tax withholding requirements with
respect to the customers for whose account you are holding any shares as
nominee.  With respect to customers other than such customers, you shall
provide us with all information (including, without limitation,
certification of taxpayer identification numbers and back-up withholding
instructions) necessary or appropriate for us to comply with legal and
regulatory reporting requirements. 
 (d) You shall be responsible for determining, in accordance with the then
current Prospectus, whether, and the extent to which, a contingent deferred
sales charge is applicable to a purchase of shares from a customer for
whose account you are holding such shares as nominee; and you agree to
present immediately to us any contingent deferred sales charge to which
such purchase was subject.  You hereby represent that if you hold shares
subject to such a charge, you have the capability to track and account for
such charge; and we reserve the right, at our discretion, to verify that
capability through inspection of your tracking and accounting system or
otherwise.
5. Upon request, we will furnish you a reasonable number of copies of the
then current prospectus and statement of additional information of each of
the Portfolios and the printed information referred to in paragraph 7 below
issued as supplements thereto.
6. (a) You represent that you either (i) are registered as a securities
broker/dealer with the Securities and Exchange Commission and are and will
remain a member in good standing of the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"), and agree to abide by all of its rules and
regulations including its Rules of Fair Practice (reference is hereby
specifically made to Section 26, Article III, of the Rules of Fair Practice
of the NASD, which is incorporated herein as if set forth in full); or (ii)
you are a bank as defined in Section 3(a)(6) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934, as amended, and are duly authorized to engage in the Transactions
to be performed hereunder.  If your membership in the NASD terminates, or
you violate any provision of said Section 26, or if you cease to be a bank
as defined above, this Agreement will be immediately and automatically
terminated.
 (b) We shall not purchase Portfolio shares from the Portfolio except for
the purpose of covering purchase orders already received by us, and you
shall not purchase Portfolio shares from us, other than for investment,
except for the purpose of covering purchase orders already received by you.
 (c) You shall not withhold placing customers' orders for Portfolio shares
so as to profit yourself as a result of such withholding, e.g., by virtue
of a change in the Portfolio's net asset value per share from that used in
determining the offering price to your customers.
 (d) We shall not accept a conditional order for Portfolio shares on any
basis other than at a definite specified price.
 (e) If, within seven business days after confirmation by us of the
original purchase order for shares of a Portfolio, such shares are
repurchased by the issuing Portfolio or by us for the account of such
Portfolio or are tendered for redemption by the customer, you shall
forthwith refund, or forfeit the right to receive, the full amount of any
agency compensation on the original sale pursuant to paragraph 2(a) above
and any distribution payments or service payments made to you pursuant to
paragraph 2(b) above.  You shall refund to the Portfolio immediately upon
receipt the amount of any dividends or distributions paid to you as nominee
for your customers with respect to redeemed or repurchased Portfolio shares
to the extent that the proceeds of such redemption or repurchase may
include the dividends or distributions payable on such shares.  You shall
be notified by us of such repurchase or redemption within ten days of the
date of such transaction.
 (f) In the event any adjustment in the amount of agency compensation made
to you on any sale under paragraph 2(a) or in distribution payments or
service payments made to you under paragraph 2(b) shall result in an
overpayment by us of such compensation or payment, you shall forthwith
remit to us such overpayment.  The term "adjustment" as used in the
preceding sentence shall not include any changes in amounts paid to or due
you caused by a change in or discontinuance of such compensation,
distribution payments or service payments (as provided under paragraphs
2(a), 2(b) and 8) prior to the effective date of such change or
discontinuance of such compensation or payments.  You acknowledge that the
foregoing shall in no way limit our right to change or discontinue such
compensation, distribution payments or service payments as provided in
paragraphs 2 and 8 hereof, and that, after the effective date of a change
in, or discontinuance by us of the agency compensation under paragraph 2(a)
or the distribution payments or service payments under paragraph 2(b), or
the termination of any Plan, any such agency compensation under paragraph
2(a) or distribution payments or service payments under paragraph 2(b)
shall be in amounts and made in accordance with such change,
discontinuation or termination.
7. (a) In all sales of Portfolio shares to the public you shall act as
agent for your own customer and in no transaction shall you have any
authority to act or hold yourself out as agent for us or any Portfolio, and
nothing in this Agreement, including the use of the word "compensation" or
"payment," shall cause you to be our partner, employee, or agent or give
you any authority to act for us or for any Portfolio.  Neither we nor any
Portfolio shall be liable for any of your acts or obligations under this
Agreement.
 (b) No person is authorized to make any representations concerning
Portfolio shares except those contained in such Portfolio's then current
prospectus and statement of additional information and in such printed
information subsequently issued to you by us or by the Portfolios as a
supplement to such prospectus and statement of additional information.  You
shall rely solely on the representations contained in the appropriate
prospectus and statement of additional information and in the supplemental
information referred to in the preceding sentence.  We or the Portfolio
shall bear the expense of qualifying Portfolio shares under the securities
laws of the various states.  Any printed information which we shall furnish
you (other than the Portfolios' prospectuses, statements of additional
information, periodic reports and supplemental information) is our sole
responsibility and not the responsibility of the respective Portfolios. 
You agree that the Portfolios shall have no liability or responsibility to
you with respect to any such printed information.  No sales literature or
advertising material (including material disseminated through radio,
television or other electronic media) concerning Portfolio shares, other
than such printed information, shall be used by you in connection with
making Portfolio shares available without obtaining our prior written
approval.  You shall not distribute or make available to investors any
printed information furnished by us which is marked "FOR DEALER USE ONLY"
or which otherwise indicates that it is confidential or not intended to be
distributed to investors.
 (c) You will comply with all applicable state and federal laws and with
the rules and regulations of authorized regulatory agencies thereunder. 
You will not make available shares of any Portfolio unless such shares are
duly registered under the applicable state and federal statutes and the
rules and regulations thereunder.
8. All orders are subject to acceptance or rejection by us.  We reserve the
right in our discretion, without notice, to suspend sales or to withdraw
the offering of Portfolio shares, in whole or in part, or to make a limited
offering of Portfolio shares.  This Agreement, with respect to any Plan as
defined under paragraph 2(b) hereof, shall continue in force for one year
from the effective date, and thereafter shall continue automatically for
successive annual periods, provided such continuance is specifically
subject to termination without penalty at any time if a majority of a
Portfolio's Trustees who are not interested persons of the Portfolio, as
defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, or a majority of the
outstanding shares of the Portfolio or class thereof, as applicable, vote
to terminate or not to continue such Plan.  Either of us may cancel this
Agreement upon telephonic or written notice to the other.  Upon telephonic
or written notice to you, we may also change or amend any provision of this
Agreement.  Upon telephonic or written notice to you, we or any Portfolio
may change, amend or discontinue any schedule or schedules of compensation
or payments issued by us from time to time and may issue a new or
replacement schedule or schedules of compensation or payments from time to
time.  You hereby agree that you shall have no vested interest in any type,
amount or rate of compensation or payment and that you shall have no claim
against us or any Portfolio by virtue of any change or diminution in the
rate or amount of, or discontinuance of, any compensation or payment in
connection with the shares of any Portfolio.
9. You agree, in connection with any Portfolio(s) that offer multiple
classes of shares, (i) to comply with our policies regarding the sale of
classes of shares as provided to you from time to time, and (ii) to
disclose to investors that are eligible to purchase the other class(es) of
such Portfolio(s) (as set forth in the prospectus of the applicable
Portfolio) the availability of such other class(es).
10. Failure of either party to terminate this Agreement upon the occurrence
of any event set forth in this Agreement as a cause for termination shall
not constitute a waiver of the right to terminate this Agreement at a later
time on account of such occurrence.
11. In the event of a dispute, such dispute shall be settled by arbitration
before arbitrators sitting in Boston, Massachusetts in accordance with the
commercial rules then in effect at the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc.  The arbitrators shall act by majority decision, and their
award may allocate attorneys' fees and arbitration costs between the
parties; such award shall be final and binding between the parties and
judgment thereon may be entered in any court of competent jurisdiction.
12. All communications to us should be sent to us at our offices, 82
Devonshire Street, Mail Zone L12C, Boston, Massachusetts 02109, Attn: Bank
Wholesale Market.  Any notice to you shall be duly given if mailed or
telegraphed to you at the address specified by you below.  This Agreement
shall become binding upon receipt by us in Boston, Massachusetts of a
counterpart hereof duly accepted and signed by you.  This Agreement will
terminate automatically in the event of its assignment, as defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940.  THIS AGREEMENT SHALL BE CONSTRUED IN
ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
13. This Agreement supersedes and cancels all previous agreements between
us, whether oral or written.
   Very truly yours,
  [Signature lines and schedules omitted]
 
13. This Agreement supersedes and cancels all previous agreements between
us, whether oral or written.
   Very truly yours,
   FIDELITY DISTRIBUTORS CORPORATION
   By__________________________________
   Dated:_______________________________
ACCEPTED AND AGREED:
By ___________________________________________________
 Authorized Representative
______________________________________________________
Name and Title (Please print or type)
_______________________________________________________
Name of Firm 
Address: _______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
NOTE: Please return two signed copies of this Agreement to Fidelity
Distributors Corporation.  Upon acceptance, one countersigned copy will be
returned to you.
 
Schedule A to Bank Agency Agreement
THE FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS CURRENTLY ARE:
Dated:_______________
 
Schedule B to Bank Agency Agreement
THE FIDELITY FUNDS ARE:
Dated:__________________
 
Schedule C to Bank Agency Agreement
PURSUANT TO PARAGRAPH 4 OF THE BANK AGENCY AGREEMENT:
[  ]  Boston Financial Data Services, Inc.
[  ]  Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company
IS HEREBY APPOINTED TO EXECUTE PURCHASE, SALE, TRANSFER, OR REDEMPTION
TRANSACTIONS IN SHARES OF THE FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS. 

 
 
          Exhibit 6(j)
SELLING DEALER AGREEMENT
 As the principal underwriter of the shares of the Fidelity Advisor Funds
and the Money Funds (the "Portfolios"), we (Fidelity Distributors
Corporation) agree to sell to you (____________________________) shares of
each of the Portfolios purchased by us as principal from the Portfolios for
resale by you as principal upon the following terms and conditions:
 1. As used herein the following terms shall have the meaning hereinafter
set forth (unless a different meaning is plainly required by the context):
  (a) "Fidelity Advisor Funds" shall mean the open-end investment
companies, series, or (in the case of companies or series offering multiple
classes of shares) classes of one or more of the foregoing, the shares of
which from time to time shall be offered by us as principal underwriter to
you hereunder and which are designated by us as such by telephonic or
written notice to you.  This Agreement shall apply only to such companies,
series or classes so designated and offered and only such companies, series
or classes shall be considered to be Fidelity Advisor Funds.
  (b) "Money Fund" shall mean Daily Money Fund, Daily Tax Exempt Money Fund
and any other open-end investment companies, series or (in the case of
companies or series offering multiple classes of shares) classes of one or
more of the foregoing, the shares of which from time to time shall be
offered by us as principal underwriter to you hereunder and which are
designated by us as such by telephonic or written notice to you.  This
Agreement shall apply only to such companies, series or classes so
designated and offered and only such companies, series or classes shall be
considered to be Money Funds.
  (c) "Portfolio" shall mean any one of the Fidelity Advisor Funds or Money
Funds.
  (d) "Money Fund Shareholders" shall mean shareholders of the Money Funds
who have purchased such shares from you or have acquired shares of a Money
Fund by exchange of shares of a Fidelity Advisor Fund or another Money Fund
pursuant to this Agreement.
 2. (a) In all resales to the public of shares of the Portfolios sold to
you by us (i) you shall sell at the applicable public offering price giving
effect, where applicable, to cumulative or quantity discounts or other
purchase programs, plans or services described in the then current
prospectus of the Portfolio whose shares are being resold, (ii) you shall
act as dealer, and (iii) your discount or concession, if any, with respect
to the resale shall be as set forth in the applicable schedule of discounts
or concessions issued by us and in effect at the time of the sale by us to
you of such shares or as set forth in the then current prospectus.  Such
discount or concession schedules are subject to change or discontinuance by
us or the Portfolios from time to time as set forth in paragraph 7 below.
  (b) In the case of a Portfolio which has adopted a plan pursuant to Rule
12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (a "Plan"), we may elect
from time to time to make distribution payments or service payments to you
as provided under such Plan.  In the case of a Portfolio that has no
currently effective Plan, we or Fidelity Management & Research Company may
elect to make distribution payments or service payments to you from our own
funds.  Any such distribution payments or service payments shall be made in
the amount and manner set forth in the applicable schedule of distribution
payments or service payments issued by us and then in effect or as set
forth in the then current prospectus.  Such schedule of distribution
payments or service payments may be changed or discontinued by us from time
to time and shall be in effect with respect to a Portfolio which has a Plan
only so long as such Portfolio's Plan remains in effect.
 3. (a) The placing of orders with us shall be governed by instructions
which we shall issue from time to time.  Payment for shares shall be made
in New York or Boston Clearing House funds in accordance with such
instructions, but in no event to be received by us later than five business
days (as defined in the Portfolio's current prospectus) after our
acceptance of your order.  If such payment is not received by us, we
reserve the right, without notice, forthwith to cancel the sale, or, at our
option, to sell the shares ordered back to the issuing Portfolio, in which
latter case we may hold you responsible for any loss, including loss of
profit, suffered by us as a result of your failure to make payment as
aforesaid.
  (b) Certificates evidencing Portfolio shares shall be available only upon
request, and only upon payment for Portfolio shares in accordance with
paragraph 3(a) above.  A confirmation statement evidencing purchase,
transfer, redemption, repurchase or sale ("Transaction") of Portfolio
shares shall be transmitted to you.  Any Transaction in uncertificated
Portfolio shares, shall be effected and evidenced by book-entry on the
records maintained by Boston Financial Data Services, Inc. or such other
entity as we may appoint from time to time upon notice to you
(collectively, "BFDS").
  (c) You designate BFDS to execute customers' Transactions in Portfolio
shares sold to you by us in accordance with the terms and provisions of any
account, program, plan or service established or used by your customers and
to confirm each such Transaction to your customers on your behalf, and at
the time of the Transaction you guarantee the legal capacity of your
customers so transacting in such shares and any co-owners of such shares.
  (d) You may instruct BFDS to register shares purchased in your name and
account as nominee for your customers, in which event all prospectuses,
proxy statements, periodic reports and other printed material will be sent
to you and all confirmations and other communications to shareholders will
be transmitted to you.  You shall be responsible for forwarding such
printed material, confirmations and communications, or the information
contained therein, to all customers for whom you hold such shares as
nominee.  However, we or BFDS on behalf of itself or the Portfolios shall
be responsible for the costs associated with your forwarding such printed
material, confirmations and communications and shall reimburse you in full
for such costs.  You shall also be responsible for complying with all
reporting and tax withholding requirements with respect to the customers
for whose account you are holding any shares as nominee.  With respect to
customers other than such customers, you shall provide us with all
information (including, without limitation, certification of taxpayer
identification numbers and back-up withholding instructions) necessary or
appropriate for us to comply with legal and regulatory reporting
requirements.
  (e) You shall be responsible for determining, in accordance with the then
current prospectus, whether, and the extent to which, a contingent deferred
sales charge is applicable to a purchase of shares from a customer for
whose account you are holding such shares as nominee; and you agree to
present immediately to us any contingent deferred sales charge to which
such purchase was subject.  You hereby represent that if you hold shares
subject to such a charge, you have the capability to track and account for
such charge; and we reserve the right, at our discretion, to verify that
capability through inspection of your tracking and accounting system or
otherwise.  
 4. Upon request, we will furnish you a reasonable number of copies of the
then current prospectus and statement of additional information of each of
the Portfolios and the printed information referred to in paragraph 6 below
issued as supplements thereto.
 5. (a) You represent that you are and will remain a member in good
standing of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"),
and agree to abide by all of its rules and regulations including its Rules
of Fair Practice.  Reference is hereby specifically made to Section 26,
Article III, of the Rules of Fair Practice of the NASD, which is
incorporated herein as if set forth in full.  The termination of your
membership in the NASD or any violation of said Section 26 will immediately
and automatically terminate this Agreement.
  (b) We shall not purchase Portfolio shares from the Portfolio except for
the purpose of covering purchase orders already received by us, and you
shall not purchase Portfolio shares from us other than for investment
except for the purpose of covering purchase orders already received by you.
  (c) You shall not withhold placing customers' orders for Portfolio shares
so as to profit yourself as a result of such withholding, e.g., by virtue
of a change in the Portfolio's net asset value per share from that used in
determining the offering price to your customers.
  (d) We shall not accept a conditional order for Portfolio shares on any
basis other than at a definite specified price.
  (e) If, within seven business days after confirmation by us of your
original purchase order for shares of a Fidelity Advisor Fund, such shares
are repurchased by the issuing Fidelity Advisor Fund or by us for the
account of such Fidelity Advisor Fund or are tendered for redemption by the
customer, (i) you shall forthwith refund to us the full discount retained
by, or concession paid to, you on the original sale pursuant to paragraph
2(a) above and any distribution payments or service payments made to you
pursuant to paragraph 2(b) above and (ii) we shall forthwith pay to such
Fidelity Advisor Fund our share of any sales charge on the original sale by
us, and shall also pay such Fidelity Advisor Fund the refund received under
clause (i) when we receive it.  You shall refund to the Fidelity Advisor
Fund immediately upon receipt the amount of any dividends or distributions
paid to you as nominee for your customers with respect to redeemed or
repurchased Fidelity Advisor Fund shares to the extent that the proceeds of
such redemption or repurchase may include the dividends or distributions
payable on such shares.  In the case of certificated Fidelity Advisor Fund
shares, you shall be notified by us of such repurchase or redemption within
ten days of the date on which a properly executed share certificate and
stock power together with appropriate supporting papers is delivered to us
or to such Fidelity Advisor Fund; and in the case of uncertificated
Fidelity Advisor Fund shares, you shall be notified by us of such
repurchase or redemption within ten days of such repurchase or redemption. 
Delivery to BFDS is delivery to the Fidelity Advisor Fund.
  (f) In the event any adjustment in the discount retained by, or
concession paid to, you on any sale under paragraph 2(a) or in the
distribution payments or service payments made to you under paragraph 2(b)
shall result in an overpayment by us of such discount, concession or
payment, you shall forthwith remit such overpayment.  The term "adjustment"
as used in the preceding sentence shall not include any changes in amounts
paid to, retained by, or due you caused by a change in or discontinuance of
such discounts, concessions, distribution payments or service payments (as
provided under paragraphs 2(a), 2(b) and 7) prior to the effective date of
such change or discontinuance of discounts, concessions, distribution
payments or service payments.  You acknowledge that the foregoing shall in
no way limit our right to change or discontinue such discounts,
concessions, distribution payments or service payments as provided in
paragraphs 2 and 7 hereof, and that, after the effective date of a change
in or discontinuance by us of the discount or concession schedules or
distribution payments or service payments or termination of any Plan, any
such discounts or concessions under paragraph 2(a) or distribution payments
or service payments under paragraph 2(b) shall be in amounts and made in
accordance with such change, discontinuation or termination.
  (g) Neither we nor you shall, as principal, purchase Portfolio shares
from a record holder at a price lower than the bid price (net asset value
less any applicable contingent deferred sales charge) next quoted by or for
the issuing Portfolio.
 6. (a) In all sales of Portfolio shares to the public you shall act as a
dealer for your own account and in no transaction shall you have any
authority to act or hold yourself out as agent for us, or any Portfolio,
and nothing in this Agreement including the use of the words "discount,"
"concession" or "payment," shall cause you to be our partner, employee, or
agent or give you any authority to act for us or for any Portfolio. 
Neither we nor any Portfolio shall be liable for any of your acts or
obligations as a dealer under this Agreement.
  (b) No person is authorized to make any representations concerning
Portfolio shares except those contained in such Portfolio's then current
prospectus and statement of additional information and in such printed
information subsequently issued to you by us or by the Portfolios as a
supplement to such prospectus and statement of additional information.  In
buying shares from us or selling shares to us hereunder, you shall rely
solely on the representations contained in the appropriate prospectus and
statement of additional information and in the supplemental information
referred to in the preceding sentence.  We or the Portfolio shall bear the
expense of qualifying Portfolio shares under the securities laws of the
various states.  Any printed information which we shall furnish you (other
than the Portfolios' prospectuses, statements of additional information,
periodic reports and supplemental information) is our sole responsibility
and not the responsibility of the respective Portfolios.  You agree that
the Portfolios shall have no liability or responsibility to you with
respect to any such printed information.  No sales literature or
advertising material (including material disseminated through radio,
television or other electronic media) concerning Portfolio shares, other
than such printed information, shall be used by you in connection with the
offer or sale of Portfolio shares without obtaining our prior written
approval.  You shall not distribute or make available to investors any
printed information furnished by us which is marked "FOR DEALER USE ONLY"
or which otherwise indicates that it is confidential or not intended to be
distributed to investors.
  (c) You will comply with all applicable state and federal laws and with
the rules and regulations of authorized regulatory agencies thereunder. 
You will not offer shares of any Portfolio for sale unless such shares are
duly registered under the applicable state and federal statutes and the
rules and regulations thereunder.
 7. All orders are subject to acceptance or rejection by us.  We reserve
the right in our discretion, without notice, to suspend sales or to
withdraw the offering of Portfolio shares, in whole or in part, or to make
a limited offering of Portfolio shares.  This Agreement, with respect to
any Plan as defined under paragraph 2(b) hereof, shall continue in force
for one year from the effective date, and thereafter shall continue
automatically for successive annual periods, provided such continuance is
specifically subject to termination without penalty at any time if a
majority of a Portfolio's Trustees who are not interested persons of the
Portfolio, as defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, or a majority
of the outstanding shares of the Portfolio or class thereof, as applicable,
vote to terminate or not to continue such Plan.   Either of us may cancel
this Agreement upon telephonic or written notice to the other.  Upon
telephonic or written notice to you, we may also change, or amend any
provision of this Agreement.  Upon telephonic or written notice to you, we
or any Portfolio may change, amend or discontinue any schedule or schedules
of discounts, concessions, distribution payments or service payments issued
by us from time to time and may issue a new or replacement schedule or
schedules of discounts, concessions, distribution payments or service
payments from time to time.  You hereby agree that you shall have no vested
interest in any type, amount or rate of discount, concession, distribution
payment or service payment and that you shall have no claim against us or
any Portfolio by virtue of any change or diminution in the rate or amount
of, or discontinuance of, any discount, concession, distribution payment or
service payment in connection with the shares of any Portfolio.
 8. We hereby agree that (a) we will keep the record keeping and
shareholder service operations of the Fidelity Advisor Funds and those of
the Money Funds as they relate to Money Fund Shareholders strictly
segregated from those of any investment companies, other than the Fidelity
Advisor Funds or the Money Funds as herein provided, for which we or one of
our affiliates acts as investment advisor, manager, administrator or
distributor (the "Fidelity Funds"); (b) we will not institute, or allow any
of the Portfolios to institute, any privilege permitting shares of the
Portfolios owned by Fidelity Advisor Fund shareholders or Money Fund
Shareholders to be exchanged for shares of the Fidelity Funds except that
shares of a Fidelity Advisor Fund may be exchanged for shares of another
Fidelity Advisor Fund or Money Fund and Money Fund shares may be exchanged
for Fidelity Advisor Fund shares or for shares of another Money Fund; and
(c) we will not permit any of the Portfolios to solicit, communicate with
or disseminate any written materials to Fidelity Advisor Fund shareholders
or Money Fund Shareholders with respect to shares of any Fidelity Fund or
services offered by us or any of our affiliates, except that we may
communicate (i) with shareholders of the Portfolios about matters relating
to the Portfolios, (ii) with shareholders of any Fidelity Fund who are also
shareholders of the Portfolios to the same extent as other shareholders of
such Fidelity Fund, (iii) with shareholders of the Money Funds who are not
Money Fund Shareholders, and (iv) with shareholders of the Portfolios in
their capacity as members of the general public in connection with
advertising or other communications directed to the general public.  The
provisions of this paragraph 8 shall survive the amendment or termination
of this Agreement.
 9. You agree, in connection with any Portfolio(s) that offer multiple
classes of shares, (i) to comply with our policies regarding the sale of
classes of shares as provided to you from time to time, and (ii) to
disclose to investors that are eligible to purchase the other class(es) of
such Portfolio(s) (as set forth in the prospectus of the applicable
Portfolio) the availability of such other class(es).
 10. Failure of either party to terminate this Agreement upon the
occurrence of any event set forth in this Agreement as a cause for
termination shall not constitute a waiver of the right to terminate this
Agreement at a later time on account of such occurrence.
 11. In the event of a dispute, such dispute shall be settled by
arbitration before arbitrators sitting in Boston, Massachusetts in
accordance with the commercial rules then in effect at the National
Association of Securities Dealers, Inc.  The arbitrators shall act by
majority decision, and their award may allocate attorneys' fees and
arbitration costs between the parties; such award shall be final and
binding between the parties and judgment thereon may be entered in any
court of competent jurisdiction.
 12. All communications to us should be sent to us at our offices, 82
Devonshire Street, Mail Zone L9C, Boston, Massachusetts 02109, Attn: Broker
Dealer Services Group.   Any notice to you shall be duly given if mailed or
telegraphed to you at the address specified by you below.  This Agreement
shall become binding upon receipt by us in Boston, Massachusetts of a
counterpart hereof duly accepted and signed by you.  This Agreement will
terminate automatically in the event of its assignment, as defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940.  THIS AGREEMENT SHALL BE CONSTRUED IN
ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
 13. This Agreement supersedes and cancels all previous agreements between
us, whether oral or written.
    Very truly yours,
Dated:_________________                                 [Signature lines
and schedules omitted]
    By ____________________
    
ACCEPTED AND AGREED:
___________________________
 Firm
By ________________________
 Authorized Representative
Address: ____________________
___________________________
___________________________
 
Schedule A to Selling Dealer Agreement
The Fidelity Advisor Funds currently are:
The Money Funds currently are:
Dated:______________

 
 
                                                                           
                 EXHIBIT 6(k)
SELLING DEALER AGREEMENT
(For Bank Related Transactions)
 You ________________ are registered as a broker-dealer under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 and have executed a written agreement with
a bank or bank affiliate to provide brokerage services to that bank, bank
affiliate and/or their customers.  As principal underwriter of the Fidelity
Advisor Funds and the Fidelity Funds (the "Portfolios"), we (Fidelity
Distributors Corporation) agree to sell to you shares of each of the
Portfolios purchased by us as principal from the Portfolios for resale by
you as principal to Bank Clients (as hereinafter defined) upon the
following terms and conditions:
1. As used herein the following terms shall have the meaning hereinafter
set forth (unless a different meaning is plainly required by the context):
 (a) "Bank" shall mean a bank as defined in Section 3(a)(6) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or an affiliate of such a
bank, with which you have entered into a written agreement to provide
brokerage services; and "Bank Client" shall mean the customers of such a
Bank. 
 (b) "Fidelity Advisor Funds" shall mean the open-end investment companies,
series, or (in the case of companies or series offering multiple classes of
shares) classes of one or more of the foregoing, the shares of which from
time to time shall be offered by us as principal underwriter to you
hereunder and which are designated as such on Schedule A, as amended by us
from time to time upon notice to you.  This Agreement shall apply only to
such companies, series, or classes so designated and only such companies,
series or classes shall be considered to be Fidelity Advisor Funds.
 (c) "Fidelity Funds" shall mean the open-end investment companies, series
or (in the case of companies or series offering multiple classes of shares)
classes of one or more of the foregoing, the shares of which from time to
time shall be offered by us as principal underwriter to you hereunder and
which are designated as such on Schedule B, as amended by us from time to
time upon notice to you.  This Agreement shall apply only to such
companies, series, or classes so designated and only such companies, series
or classes shall be considered to be Fidelity Funds.
 (d) "Portfolio" shall mean any one of the Fidelity Advisor Funds or
Fidelity Funds.
 
 (e) "Transfer Agent" shall mean (i) with respect to the Fidelity Advisor
Funds, the person designated on Schedule C and appointed by you pursuant to
paragraph 4 to provide the services described under such paragraph; and
(ii) with respect to the Fidelity Funds, the transfer agent of such
Fidelity Fund.
2. (a) In all resales to the public of shares of the Portfolios sold to you
by us (i) you shall sell at the applicable public offering price, giving
effect, where applicable, to cumulative or quantity discounts or other
purchase programs, plans or services as described in the then current
prospectus of the Portfolio whose shares are being resold and you shall
transmit payment for such shares in accordance with paragraph 3; (ii) you
shall act as dealer; and (iii) your discount or concession, if any, with
respect to the resale shall be as set forth in the applicable schedule of
discounts or concessions issued by us and in effect at the time of the sale
by us to you of such shares or as set forth in the then current prospectus. 
Such discount and concession schedules are subject to change or
discontinuance by us or the Portfolios from time to time as set forth in
paragraph 8 below.
 (b) In the case of a Portfolio which has adopted a plan pursuant to Rule
12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940 (a "Plan"), we may elect
from time to time to make distribution payments or service payments to you
under such Plan.  In the case of a Portfolio that has no currently
effective Plan, we or Fidelity Management & Research Company may elect to
make distribution payments or service payments to you from our own funds. 
Any such distribution payments or service payments shall be made in the
amount and manner set forth in the applicable schedule of distribution
payments or service payments issued by us and then in effect or as set
forth in the then current prospectus.  Such schedule of distribution
payments or service payments may be changed or discontinued by us from time
to time and shall be in effect with respect to a Portfolio which has a Plan
only so long as such Portfolio's Plan remains in effect.
 (c) Discounts or concessions under paragraph 2(a) and distribution
payments or service payments under paragraph 2(b), shall apply only with
respect to (i) those shares of the Fidelity Funds purchased or maintained
for the account of Bank Clients; and (ii) shares of the Fidelity Advisor
Funds. Anything to the contrary notwithstanding, neither we nor any
Portfolio shall provide to you, nor shall you retain, discounts or
concessions on the resale of shares of, or distribution payments or service
payments with respect to assets of, the Fidelity Funds attributable to you
or any of your clients, other than Bank Clients.  In placing a purchase,
sale, transfer or redemption order in shares of the Fidelity Funds with us,
you shall identify the Bank on behalf of whose Clients you are placing the
order; and you shall identify as a non-Bank Client Order, any purchase,
sale, transfer or redemption order in shares of the Fidelity Funds placed
for the account of a non-Bank Client.
3. The placing of orders with us shall be governed by instructions which we
shall issue from time to time.  Payment for shares shall be made in New
York or Boston Clearing House funds in accordance with such instructions,
but in no event to be received by us later than five business days (as
defined in the Portfolio's current prospectus) after our acceptance of the
order.  If such payment is not received by us, we reserve the right,
without notice, forthwith to cancel the sale or, at our option, to sell the
shares ordered back to the issuing Portfolio, in which latter case we may
hold you responsible for any loss, including loss of profit, suffered by us
as a result of your failure to make payment as aforesaid.
4. (a) The Fidelity Advisor Funds offer you the option of transacting
business with such funds either through the fund's own transfer agent or
through a third party record keeper.  You may designate your selection with
respect to the Fidelity Advisor Funds on Schedule C.
 (b)  You designate the Transfer Agent for each Portfolio to execute your
customers' purchase, sale, transfer, or redemption orders ("Transactions")
in Portfolio shares sold to you by us in accordance with the terms and
provisions of any account, program, plan or service established or used by
your customers and to confirm each such Transaction to your customers on
your behalf on a fully disclosed basis, and at the time of the Transaction,
you guarantee the legal capacity of your customers and any co-owners of
such shares so transacting in such shares.
 (c) You may instruct the Transfer Agent to register shares purchased in
your name and account as nominee for your customers, in which event all
prospectuses, proxy statements, periodic reports and other printed material
will be sent to you and all confirmations and other communications to
shareholders will be transmitted to you.  You shall be responsible for
forwarding such printed material, confirmations and communications, or the
information contained therein, to all customers for whom you hold such
shares as nominee.  However, we or the Transfer Agent on behalf of itself
or the Portfolios shall be responsible for the costs associated with your
forwarding such printed material, confirmations and communications and
shall reimburse you in full for such costs.  You shall also be responsible
for complying with all reporting and tax withholding requirements with
respect to the customers for whose account you are holding any shares as
nominee.  With respect to customers other than such customers, you shall
provide us with all information (including, without limitation,
certification of taxpayer identification numbers and back-up withholding
instructions) necessary or appropriate for us to comply with legal and
regulatory reporting requirements.
 (d) You shall be responsible for determining, in accordance with the then
current prospectus, whether, and the extent to which, a contingent deferred
sales charge is applicable to a purchase of shares from a customer for
whose account you are holding such shares as nominee; and you agree to
present immediately to us any contingent deferred sales charge to which
such purchase was subject.  You hereby represent that if you hold shares
subject to such a charge, you have the capability to track and account for
such charge; and we reserve the right, at our discretion, to verify that
capability through inspection of your tracking and accounting system or
otherwise. 
5. Upon request, we will furnish you with a reasonable number of copies of
the then current prospectus and statement of additional information of each
of the Portfolios and the printed information referred to in paragraph 7
below issued as supplements thereto.
6. (a) You represent that you are and will remain a member in good standing
of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. ("NASD"), and agree
to abide by all of its rules and regulations including its Rules of Fair
Practice (reference is hereby specifically made to Section 26, Article III,
of the Rules of Fair Practice of the NASD, which is incorporated herein as
if set forth in full).  The termination of your membership in the NASD or
any violation of said Section 26 will immediately and automatically
terminate this Agreement.
 (b) We shall not purchase Portfolio shares from the Portfolio except for
the purpose of covering purchase orders already received by us, and you
shall not purchase Portfolio shares from us, other than for investment,
except for the purpose of covering purchase orders already received by you.
 (c) You shall not withhold placing customers' orders for Portfolio shares
so as to profit yourself as a result of such withholding, e.g., by virtue
of a change in the Portfolio's net asset value per share from that used in
determining the offering price to your customers.
 (d) We shall not accept a conditional order for Portfolio shares on any
basis other than at a definite specified price.
 (e) If, within seven business days after confirmation by us of your
original purchase order for shares of a Portfolio, such shares are
repurchased by the issuing Portfolio or by us for the account of such
Portfolio or are tendered for redemption by the customer, (i) you shall
forthwith refund to us the full discount retained by, or concession paid
to, you on the original sale pursuant to paragraph 2(a) above and any
distribution payments or service payments made to you pursuant to paragraph
2(b) above and (ii) we shall, as applicable, forthwith pay to such
Portfolio our share of the sales charge on the original sale by us and
shall also pay such Portfolio the refund received under clause (i) when we
receive it.  You shall refund to the Portfolio immediately upon receipt the
amount of any dividends or distributions paid to you as nominee for your
customers with respect to Portfolio shares so redeemed or repurchased to
the extent that the proceeds of such redemption or repurchase may include
the dividends or distributions payable on such shares.  You shall be
notified by us of such repurchase or redemption within ten days of such
repurchase or redemption.
 (f) In the event any adjustment in the discount retained by, or concession
paid to, you on any sale under paragraph 2(a) or in the distribution
payments or service payments made to you under paragraph 2(b) shall result
in an overpayment by us of such discount, concession or payment, you shall
forthwith remit to us such overpayment.  The term "adjustment" as used in
the preceding sentence shall not include any changes in amounts paid to,
retained by, or due you caused by a change in, or discontinuance of, such
discounts, concessions, distribution payments or service payments (as
provided under paragraphs 2(a), 2(b) and 8) prior to the effective date of
such change or discontinuance of such discounts, concessions, distribution
payments or service payments.  You acknowledge that the foregoing shall in
no way limit our right to change or discontinue such discounts,
concessions, distribution payments or service payments as provided in
paragraphs 2 and 8 hereof, and that, after the effective date of a change
in, or discontinuance by us of the discount or concession schedules or
distribution payments or service payments or the termination of any Plan,
any such discounts or concessions under paragraph 2(a) or distribution
payments or service payments under paragraph 2(b) shall be in amounts and
made in accordance with such change, discontinuation or termination.
 (g) Neither we nor you shall, as principal, purchase Portfolio shares from
a record holder at a price lower than the bid price (net asset value less
any applicable contingent deferred sales charge) next quoted by or for the
issuing Portfolio.
7. (a) In all sales of Portfolio shares to the public you shall act as a
dealer for your own account and in no transaction shall you have any
authority to act or hold yourself out as agent for us, or any Portfolio,
and nothing in this Agreement, including the use of the words "discount,"
"concession" or "payment," shall cause you to be our partner, employee, or
agent or give you any authority to act for us or for any Portfolio. 
Neither we nor any Portfolio shall be liable for any of your acts or
obligations as a dealer under this Agreement.
 (b) No person is authorized to make any representations concerning
Portfolio shares except those contained in such Portfolio's then current
prospectus and statement of additional information and in such printed
information subsequently issued to you by us or by the Portfolios as a
supplement to such prospectus and statement of additional information.  In
buying shares from us or selling shares to us hereunder, you shall rely
solely on the representations contained in the appropriate prospectus and
statement of additional information and in the supplemental information
referred to in the preceding sentence.  We or the Portfolio shall bear the
expense of qualifying Portfolio shares under the securities laws of the
various states.  Any printed information which we shall furnish you (other
than the Portfolios' prospectuses, statements of additional information,
periodic reports and supplemental information) is our sole responsibility
and not the responsibility of the respective Portfolios.  You agree that
the Portfolios shall have no liability or responsibility to you with
respect to any such printed information.  No sales literature or
advertising material (including material disseminated through radio,
television or other electronic media) concerning Portfolio shares, other
than such printed information, shall be used by you in connection with the
offer or sale of Portfolio shares without obtaining our prior written
approval.  You shall not distribute or make available to investors any
printed information furnished by us which is marked "FOR DEALER USE ONLY"
or which otherwise indicates that it is confidential or not intended to be
distributed to investors.
 (c) You will comply with all applicable state and federal laws and with
the rules and regulations of authorized regulatory agencies thereunder. 
You will not offer shares of any Portfolio for sale unless such shares are
duly registered under the applicable state and federal statutes and the
rules and regulations thereunder.
8. All orders are subject to acceptance or rejection by us.  We reserve the
right in our discretion, without notice, to suspend sales or to withdraw
the offering of Portfolio shares, in whole or in part, or to make a limited
offering of Portfolio shares.  This Agreement, with respect to any Plan as
defined under paragraph 2(b) hereof, shall continue in force for one year
from the effective date, and thereafter shall continue automatically for
successive annual periods, provided such continuance is specifically
subject to termination without penalty at any time if a majority of a
Portfolio's Trustees who are not interested persons of the Portfolio, as
defined in the Investment Company Act of 1940, or a majority of the
outstanding shares of the Portfolio or class thereof, as applicable, vote
to terminate or not to continue such Plan.  Either of us may cancel this
Agreement upon telephonic or written notice to the other.  Upon telephonic
or written notice to you, we may also change or amend any provision of this
Agreement.  Upon telephonic or written notice to you, we or any Portfolio
may change, amend or discontinue any schedule or schedules of discounts,
concessions, distribution payments or service payments issued by us from
time to time and may issue a new or replacement schedule or schedules of
discounts, concessions, distribution payments or service payments from time
to time.  You hereby agree that you shall have no vested interest in any
type, amount or rate of discount, concession, distribution payment or
service payment and that you shall have no claim against us or any
Portfolio by virtue of any change or diminution in the rate or amount of,
or discontinuance of, any discount, concession, distribution payment or
service payment in connection with the shares of any Portfolio.
9. You agree, in connection with any Portfolio(s) that offer multiple
classes of shares, (i) to comply with our policies regarding the sale of
classes of shares as provided to you from time to time, and (ii) to
disclose to investors that are eligible to purchase the other class(es) of
such Portfolio(s) (as set forth in the prospectus of the applicable
Portfolio) the availability of such other class(es).
10. Failure of either party to terminate this Agreement upon the occurrence
of any event set forth in this Agreement as a cause for termination shall
not constitute a waiver of the right to terminate this Agreement at a later
time on account of such occurrence.
11. In the event of a dispute, such dispute shall be settled by arbitration
before arbitrators sitting in Boston, Massachusetts in accordance with the
commercial rules then in effect at the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc.  The arbitrators shall act by majority decision, and their
award may allocate attorneys' fees and arbitration costs between the
parties; such award shall be final and binding between the parties and
judgment thereon may be entered in any court of competent jurisdiction.
12. All communications to us should be sent to us at our offices, 82
Devonshire Street, Mail Zone L12C, Boston, Massachusetts 02109, Attn: Bank
Wholesale Market.  Any notice to you shall be duly given if mailed or
telegraphed to you at the address specified by you below.  This Agreement
shall become binding upon receipt by us in Boston, Massachusetts of a
counterpart hereof duly accepted and signed by you.  This Agreement will
terminate automatically in the event of its assignment, as defined in the
Investment Company Act of 1940.  THIS AGREEMENT SHALL BE CONSTRUED IN
ACCORDANCE WITH THE LAWS OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS.
13. This Agreement supersedes and cancels all previous agreements between
us, whether oral or written.
   Very truly yours,
   [Signature lines and schedules omitted]
   FIDELITY DISTRIBUTORS CORPORATION
   By__________________________________
   Dated:_______________________________
ACCEPTED AND AGREED:
By ___________________________________________________
 Authorized Representative
______________________________________________________
Name and Title (Please print or type)
_______________________________________________________
Name of Firm 
Address: _______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
_______________________________________________________
NOTE: Please return two signed copies of this Agreement to Fidelity
Distributors Corporation.  Upon acceptance, one countersigned copy will be
returned to you.
Schedule A to Bank Related Selling Dealer Agreement
THE FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS CURRENTLY ARE:
Dated:_______________
 
Schedule B to Bank Related Selling Dealer Agreement
THE FIDELITY FUNDS ARE:
Dated:________________
Schedule C to Bank Related Selling Dealer Agreement
PURSUANT TO PARAGRAPH 4 OF THE BANK RELATED SELLING DEALER AGREEMENT:
[ ] Boston Financial Data Services, Inc.
[ ] Fidelity Investments Institutional Operations Company
IS HEREBY APPOINTED TO EXECUTE PURCHASE, SALE, TRANSFER, OR REDEMPTION
TRANSACTIONS IN SHARES OF THE FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
We hereby consent to the incorporation by reference, into the Prospectuses
and Statements of Additional Information in Post-Effective Amendment No. 72
to the Registration Statement on Form N-1A of Fidelity Municipal Trust:
Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund ( formerly known as Fidelity Municipal
Bond Fund), of our report dated February 2, 1996 on the financial
statements and financial highlights included in the December 31, 1995
Annual Report to Shareholders of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund.
We further consent to the references to our Firm under the headings
"Financial Highlights" in the Prospectuses and "Auditor" in the Statements
of Additional Information.  
 
/s/ COOPERS & LYBRAND L.L.P.
 
 
Boston, Massachusetts                                             COOPERS &
LYBRAND L.L.P.
June 21, 1996
 
 

 
 
 
 DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
CLASS A SHARES
 
 1. This Distribution and Service Plan (the "Plan"), when effective in
accordance with its terms, shall be the written plan contemplated by
Securities and Exchange Commission Rule 12b-1 under the Investment Company
Act of 1940, as amended (the "Act") for the Class A shares of Fidelity
Advisor Municipal Bond Fund ("Class A") a class of shares of Fidelity
Advisor Municipal Bond Fund, (the "Fund"), a portfolio of Fidelity
Municipal Trust (the "Trust").
 2. The Trust has entered into a General Distribution Agreement on behalf
of the Fund with Fidelity Distributors Corporation (the "Distributor"),
under which the Distributor uses all reasonable efforts, consistent with
its other business, to secure purchasers of the Fund's shares of beneficial
interest (the "Shares").  Such efforts may include, but neither are
required to include nor are limited to, the following:  (1) formulation and
implementation of marketing and promotional activities, such as mail
promotions and television, radio, newspaper, magazine and other mass media
advertising; (2) preparation, printing and distribution of sales
literature; (3) preparation, printing and distribution of prospectuses of
the Fund and reports to recipients other than existing shareholders of the
Fund; (4) obtaining such information, analyses and reports with respect to
marketing and promotional activities as the Distributor may, from time to
time, deem advisable; (5) making payments to securities dealers and others
engaged in the sale of Shares or who engage in shareholder support
services; and (6) providing training, marketing and support to such dealers
and others with respect to the sale of Shares.
 3. In consideration for the services provided and the expenses incurred by
the Distributor pursuant to the General Distribution Agreement and
paragraph 2 hereof, all with respect to Class A Shares, Class A shall pay
to the Distributor a fee at the annual rate of 0.40% (or such lesser amount
as the Trustees may, from time to time, determine) of the average daily net
assets of Class A throughout the month.  The determination of daily net
assets shall be made at the close of business each day throughout the month
and computed in the manner specified in the Fund's then current Prospectus
for the determination of the net asset value of the Fund's Class A Shares. 
The Distributor may use all or any portion of the fee received pursuant to
this Plan to compensate securities dealers or other persons who have
engaged in the sale of Class A Shares or in shareholder support services
pursuant to agreements with the Distributor, or to pay any of the expenses
associated with other activities authorized under paragraph 2 hereof.
 4. The Fund presently pays, and will continue to pay, a management fee to
Fidelity Management & Research Company (the "Adviser") pursuant to a
management agreement between the Fund and the Adviser (the "Management
Contract").  It is recognized that the Adviser may use its management fee
revenue, as well as its past profits or its resources from any other
source, to reimburse the Distributor for expenses incurred in connection
with the distribution of Class A Shares, including the activities referred
to in paragraph 2 hereof.  To the extent that the payment of management
fees by the Fund to the Adviser should be deemed to be indirect financing
of any activity primarily intended to result in the sale of Class A Shares
within the meaning of Rule 12b-1, then such payment shall be deemed to be
authorized by this Plan.
 5. This Plan shall become effective upon the first business day of the
month following approval by a vote of at least a "majority of the
outstanding voting securities" (as defined in the Act) of Class A, this
Plan having been approved by a vote of a majority of the Trustees of the
Trust, including a majority of Trustees who are not "interested persons" of
the Trust (as defined in the Act) and who have no direct or indirect
financial interest in the operation of this Plan or in any agreement
related to the Plan (the "Independent Trustees"), cast in person at a
meeting called for the purpose of voting on this Plan.
 6. This Plan shall, unless terminated as hereinafter provided, remain in
effect until April 30, 1997, and from year to year thereafter; provided,
however, that such continuance is subject to approval annually by a vote of
a majority of the Trustees of the Trust, including a majority of the
Independent Trustees, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of
voting on this Plan.  This Plan may be amended at any time by the Board of
Trustees, provided that (a) any amendment to increase materially the fee
provided for in paragraph 3 hereof or any amendment of the Management
Contract to increase the amount to be paid by the Fund thereunder shall be
effective only upon approval by a vote of a majority of the outstanding
voting securities of Class A, in the case of this Plan, or upon approval by
a vote of a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Fund, in
the case of the Management Contract, and (b) any material amendment of this
Plan shall be effective only upon approval in the manner provided in the
first sentence of this paragraph 6.
 7. This Plan may be terminated at any time, without the payment of any
penalty, by vote of a majority of the Independent Trustees or by a vote of
a majority of the outstanding voting securities of Class A.
 8. During the existence of this Plan, the Trust shall require the Adviser
and/or the Distributor to provide the Trust, for review by the Trustees,
and the Trustees shall review, at least quarterly, a written report of the
amounts expended in connection with financing any activity primarily
intended to result in the sale of shares of Class A (making estimates of
such costs where necessary or desirable) and the purposes for which such
expenditures were made.
 9. This Plan does not require the Adviser or Distributor to perform any
specific type or level of distribution activities or to incur any specific
level of expenses for activities primarily intended to result in the sale
of Class A Shares.
 10. Consistent with the limitation of shareholder liability as set forth
in the Trust's Declaration of Trust, any obligation assumed by Class A
pursuant to this Plan and any agreement related to this Plan shall be
limited in all cases to Class A and its assets and shall not constitute an
obligation of any shareholder of the Trust or of any other class of the
Fund, series of the Trust or class of such series.
 11. If any provision of the Plan shall be held or made invalid by a court
decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of the Plan shall not
be affected thereby.

 
 
 
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
CLASS B SHARES
 1.  This Distribution and Service Plan (the "Plan"), when effective in
accordance with its terms, shall be the written plan contemplated by Rule
12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Act") for
Class B Shares of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund ("Class B"), a class
of shares of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund (the "Fund"), a series of
Fidelity Municipal Trust (the "Trust").
 2.  The Trust has entered into a General Distribution Agreement on behalf
of the Fund with Fidelity Distributors Corporation (the "Distributor")
under which the Distributor uses all reasonable efforts, consistent with
its other business, to secure purchasers of the Fund's shares of beneficial
interest (the "Shares").  Such efforts may include, but neither are
required to include nor are limited to, the following:  (1) formulation and
implementation of marketing and promotional activities, such as mail
promotions and television, radio, newspaper, magazine and other mass media
advertising; (2) preparation, printing and distribution of sales
literature; (3) preparation, printing and distribution of prospectuses of
the Fund and reports to recipients other than existing shareholders of the
Fund; (4) obtaining such information, analyses and reports with respect to
marketing and promotional activities as the Distributor may, from time to
time, deem advisable; (5) making payments to securities dealers and others
engaged in the sale of Shares or in shareholder support services
("Investment Professionals"); and (6) providing training, marketing and
support to Investment Professionals with respect to the sale of Shares.
 3.  In accordance with such terms as the Trustees may, from time to time
establish, and in conjunction with its services under the General
Distribution Agreement with respect to Class B Shares, the Distributor is
hereby expressly authorized to make payments to Investment Professionals in
connection with the sale of Class B Shares.  Such payments may be paid as a
percentage of the dollar amount of purchases of Class B Shares attributable
to a particular Investment Professional, or may take such other form as may
be approved by the Trustees.  
 4.  In consideration of the services provided and the expenses incurred by
the Distributor pursuant to the General Distribution Agreement and
paragraphs 2 and 3 hereof, all with respect to Class B Shares:
 (a)  Class B shall pay to the Distributor a monthly distribution fee at
the annual rate of 0.75% (or such lesser amount as the Trustees may, from
time to time, determine) of the average daily net assets of Class B
throughout the month.  The determination of daily net assets shall be made
at the close of business each day throughout the month and computed in the
manner specified in the Fund's then current Prospectus for the
determination of the net asset value of Class B Shares.  The Distributor
may, but shall not be required to, use all or any portion of the
distribution fee received pursuant to the Plan to compensate Investment
Professionals who have engaged in the sale of Class B Shares or in
shareholder support services with respect to Class B Shares pursuant to
agreements with the Distributor, or to pay any of the expenses associated
with other activities authorized under paragraphs 2 and 3 hereof; and 
 (b)   In addition, the Plan recognizes that the Distributor may, in
accordance with such terms as the Trustees may from time to time establish,
receive all or a portion of any sales charges, including contingent
deferred sales charges, which may be imposed upon the sale or redemption of
Class B Shares.
 5.  Separate from any payments made as described in paragraph 4 hereof,
Class B shall also pay to the Distributor a service fee at the annual rate
of 0.25% (or such lesser amount as the Trustees may, from time to time,
determine) of the average daily net assets of Class B throughout the month. 
The determination of daily net assets shall be made at the close of
business each day throughout the month and computed in the manner specified
in the Fund's then current Prospectus for the determination of the net
asset value of Class B Shares.  In accordance with such terms as the
Trustees may from time to time establish, the Distributor may use all or a
portion of such service fees to compensate Investment Professionals for
personal service and/or the maintenance of shareholder accounts, or for
other services for which "service fees" lawfully may be paid in accordance
with applicable rules and regulations.  
 6.  The Fund presently pays, and will continue to pay, a management fee to
Fidelity Management & Research Company (the "Adviser") pursuant to a
management agreement between the Fund and the Adviser (the "Management
Contract").  It is recognized that the Adviser may use its management fee
revenue, as well as its past profits or its resources from any other
source, to reimburse the Distributor for expenses incurred in connection
with the distribution of Class B Shares, including the activities referred
to in paragraphs 2 and 3 hereof.  To the extent that the payment of
management fees by the Fund to the Adviser should be deemed to be indirect
financing of any activity primarily intended to result in the sale of Class
B Shares within the meaning of Rule 12b-1, then such payment shall be
deemed to be authorized by this Plan.  
 7.  This Plan shall become effective upon the first business day of the
month following approval by a vote of at least a "majority of the
outstanding voting securities" (as defined in the Act) of Class B, this
Plan having been approved by a vote of a majority of the Trustees of the
Trust, including a majority of Trustees who are not "interested persons" of
the Trust (as defined in the Act) and who have no direct or indirect
financial interest in the operation of the Plan or in any agreement related
to the Plan (the "Independent Trustees"), cast in person at a meeting
called for the purpose of voting on this Plan.
 8.  This Plan shall, unless terminated as hereinafter provided, remain in
effect until April 30, 1997, and from year to year thereafter; provided,
however, that such continuance is subject to approval annually by a vote of
a majority of the Trustees of the Trust, including a majority of the
Independent Trustees, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of
voting on this Plan.  This Plan may be amended at any time by the Board of
Trustees, provided that (a) any amendment to increase materially the fees
provided for in paragraphs 4 and 5 hereof or any amendment of the
Management Contract to increase the amount to be paid by the Fund
thereunder shall be effective only upon approval by a vote of a majority of
the outstanding voting securities of Class B, in the case of this Plan, or
upon approval by a vote of the majority of the outstanding voting
securities of the Fund, in the case of the Management Contract, and (b) any
material amendment of this Plan shall be effective only upon approval in
the manner provided in the first sentence of this paragraph 8. 
 9.  This Plan may be terminated at any time, without the payment of any
penalty, by vote of a majority of the Independent Trustees or by a vote of
a majority of the outstanding voting securities of Class B.
 10.  During the existence of this Plan, the Trust shall require the
Adviser and/or the Distributor to provide the Trust, for review by the
Trustees, and the Trustees shall review, at least quarterly, a written
report of the amounts expended in connection with financing any activity
primarily intended to result in the sale of Class B Shares (making
estimates of such costs where necessary or desirable) and the purposes for
which such expenditures were made.
 11.  This Plan does not require the Adviser or Distributor to perform any
specific type or level of distribution activities or to incur any specific
level of expenses for activities primarily intended to result in the sale
of Class B Shares.
 12.  Consistent with the limitation of shareholder liability as set forth
in the Trust's Declaration of Trust, any obligation assumed by Class B
pursuant to this Plan and any agreement related to this Plan shall be
limited in all cases to Class B and its assets and shall not constitute an
obligation of any shareholder of the Trust or of any other class of the
Fund, series of the Trust or class of such series.
 13.  If any provision of this Plan shall be held or made invalid by a
court decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of the Plan shall
not be affected thereby.

 
 
 
DISTRIBUTION AND SERVICE PLAN
FIDELITY ADVISOR MUNICIPAL BOND FUND
INSTITUTIONAL CLASS SHARES
 1. This Distribution and Service Plan (the "Plan"), when effective in
accordance with its terms, shall be the written plan contemplated by Rule
12b-1 under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "Act") for
Institutional Class Shares of Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund
("Institutional Class"), a class of shares of Fidelity Advisor Municipal
Bond Fund (the "Fund"), a series of Fidelity Municipal Trust (the "Trust").
 2. The Trust has entered into a General Distribution Agreement on behalf
of the Fund with Fidelity Distributors Corporation (the "Distributor")
under which the Distributor uses all reasonable efforts, consistent with
its other business, to secure purchasers for the Fund's shares of
beneficial interest (the "Shares").  Under the agreement, the Distributor
pays the expenses of printing and distributing any prospectuses, reports
and other literature used by the Distributor, advertising, and other
promotional activities in connection with the offering of Shares for sale
to the public.  It is understood that Fidelity Management & Research
Company (the "Adviser") may reimburse the Distributor for these expenses
from any source available to it, including management fees paid to it by
the Fund.
 3. The Adviser directly, or through the Distributor, may, subject to the
approval of the Trustees, make payments to securities dealers and other
third parties who engage in the sale of Institutional Class Shares or who
render shareholder support services, including but not limited to providing
office space, equipment and telephone facilities, answering routine
inquiries regarding the Fund, processing shareholder transactions and
providing such other shareholder services as the Trust may reasonably
request.
 4. The Institutional Class will not make separate payments as a result of
this Plan to the Adviser, Distributor or any other party, it being
recognized that the Fund presently pays, and will continue to pay, a
management fee to the Adviser.  To the extent that any payments made by the
Fund to the Adviser, including payment of management fees, should be deemed
to be indirect financing of any activity primarily intended to result in
the sale of Institutional Class Shares within the meaning of Rule 12b-1,
then such payments shall be deemed to be authorized by this Plan.
 5. This Plan shall become effective upon the first business day of the
month following approval by a vote of at least a "majority of the
outstanding voting securities" (as defined in the Act) of the Institutional
Class, this Plan having been approved by a vote of a majority of the
Trustees of the Trust, including a majority of Trustees who are not
"interested persons" of the Trust (as defined in the Act) and who have no
direct or indirect financial interest in the operation of this Plan or in
any agreement related to the Plan (the "Independent Trustees"), cast in
person at a meeting called for the purpose of voting on this Plan.
 6. This Plan shall, unless terminated as hereinafter provided, remain in
effect until April 30, 1997, and from year to year thereafter; provided,
however, that such continuance is subject to approval annually by a vote of
a majority of the Trustees of the Trust, including a majority of the
Independent Trustees, cast in person at a meeting called for the purpose of
voting on this Plan.  This Plan may be amended at any time by the Board of
Trustees, provided that (a) any amendment to authorize direct payments by
the Institutional Class to finance any activity primarily intended to
result in the sale of Institutional Class Shares, to increase materially
the amount spent by the Institutional Class for distribution, or any
amendment of the Management Contract to increase the amount to be paid by
the Fund thereunder shall be effective only upon approval by a vote of a
majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Institutional Class,
in the case of this Plan, or upon approval by a vote of a majority of the
outstanding voting securities of the Fund, in the case of the Management
Contract, and (b) any material amendments of this Plan shall be effective
only upon approval in the manner provided in the first sentence in this
paragraph 6.
 7. This Plan may be terminated at any time, without the payment of any
penalty, by vote of a majority of the Independent Trustees or by a vote of
a majority of the outstanding voting securities of the Institutional Class.
 8. During the existence of this Plan, the Trust shall require the Adviser
and/or Distributor to provide the Trust, for review by the Trustees, and
the Trustees shall review, at least quarterly, a written report of the
amounts expended in connection with financing any activity primarily
intended to result in the sale of Institutional Class Shares (making
estimates of such costs where necessary or desirable) and the purposes for
which such expenditures were made.
 9. This Plan does not require the Adviser or Distributor to perform any
specific type or level of distribution activities or to incur any specific
level of expenses for activities primarily intended to result in the sale
of Institutional Class Shares.
 10. Consistent with the limitation of shareholder liability as set forth
in the Trust's Declaration of Trust, any obligation assumed by
Institutional Class pursuant to this Plan and any agreement related to this
Plan shall be limited in all cases to the Institutional Class and its
assets and shall not constitute an obligation of any shareholder of the
Trust or of any other class of the Fund, series of the Trust or class of
such series.
 11. If any provision of this Plan shall be held or made invalid by a court
decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of the Plan shall not
be affected thereby.


<TABLE> <S> <C>
 
 
<ARTICLE> 6 
<CIK> 0000035373
<NAME> Fidelity Municipal Trust
<SERIES>
 <NUMBER> 11
 <NAME> Fidelity Municipal Bond Portfolio
<MULTIPLIER> 1,000
       
<S>
<C>
<PERIOD-TYPE>                 year          
 
<FISCAL-YEAR-END>             dec-31-1995   
 
<PERIOD-END>                  dec-31-1995   
 
<INVESTMENTS-AT-COST>         1,052,207     
 
<INVESTMENTS-AT-VALUE>        1,115,289     
 
<RECEIVABLES>                 47,044        
 
<ASSETS-OTHER>                0             
 
<OTHER-ITEMS-ASSETS>          0             
 
<TOTAL-ASSETS>                1,162,333     
 
<PAYABLE-FOR-SECURITIES>      78,079        
 
<SENIOR-LONG-TERM-DEBT>       0             
 
<OTHER-ITEMS-LIABILITIES>     2,339         
 
<TOTAL-LIABILITIES>           80,418        
 
<SENIOR-EQUITY>               0             
 
<PAID-IN-CAPITAL-COMMON>      1,049,130     
 
<SHARES-COMMON-STOCK>         130,816       
 
<SHARES-COMMON-PRIOR>         136,498       
 
<ACCUMULATED-NII-CURRENT>     0             
 
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-NII>        0             
 
<ACCUMULATED-NET-GAINS>       (30,296)      
 
<OVERDISTRIBUTION-GAINS>      0             
 
<ACCUM-APPREC-OR-DEPREC>      63,082        
 
<NET-ASSETS>                  1,081,915     
 
<DIVIDEND-INCOME>             0             
 
<INTEREST-INCOME>             60,875        
 
<OTHER-INCOME>                0             
 
<EXPENSES-NET>                6,047         
 
<NET-INVESTMENT-INCOME>       54,828        
 
<REALIZED-GAINS-CURRENT>      1,658         
 
<APPREC-INCREASE-CURRENT>     121,673       
 
<NET-CHANGE-FROM-OPS>         178,159       
 
<EQUALIZATION>                0             
 
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-INCOME>     54,828        
 
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OF-GAINS>      525           
 
<DISTRIBUTIONS-OTHER>         0             
 
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-SOLD>       58,603        
 
<NUMBER-OF-SHARES-REDEEMED>   68,815        
 
<SHARES-REINVESTED>           4,530         
 
<NET-CHANGE-IN-ASSETS>        76,606        
 
<ACCUMULATED-NII-PRIOR>       0             
 
<ACCUMULATED-GAINS-PRIOR>     (31,758)      
 
<OVERDISTRIB-NII-PRIOR>       0             
 
<OVERDIST-NET-GAINS-PRIOR>    0             
 
<GROSS-ADVISORY-FEES>         4,282         
 
<INTEREST-EXPENSE>            0             
 
<GROSS-EXPENSE>               6,047         
 
<AVERAGE-NET-ASSETS>          1,065,899     
 
<PER-SHARE-NAV-BEGIN>         7.370         
 
<PER-SHARE-NII>               .408          
 
<PER-SHARE-GAIN-APPREC>       .904          
 
<PER-SHARE-DIVIDEND>          .408          
 
<PER-SHARE-DISTRIBUTIONS>     0             
 
<RETURNS-OF-CAPITAL>          .004          
 
<PER-SHARE-NAV-END>           8.270         
 
<EXPENSE-RATIO>               57            
 
<AVG-DEBT-OUTSTANDING>        0             
 
<AVG-DEBT-PER-SHARE>          0             
 
        

 
 
MULTIPLE CLASS OF SHARES PLAN
FOR
FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS 
DATED JULY 1, 1996
  This Multiple Class Plan (the "Plan"), when effective in accordance with
its provisions, shall be the written plan contemplated by Rule 18f-3 under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 (the "1940 Act") for the portfolios
(each a "Portfolio") of the respective Fidelity Advisor Funds (each, a
"Fund").
1.  Classes Offered.  Each Portfolio may offer up to three classes of its
shares: Class A, Class B and Institutional Class (each, a "Class").   In
addition, Fidelity Advisor Strategic Opportunities Fund ("Strategic
Opportunities Fund") and Fidelity Advisor Municipal Bond Fund ("Municipal
Bond Fund") may offer a fourth class: Initial Class and Fidelity Municipal
Bond Fund ("Initial Class").  
2.  Distribution and Shareholder Service Fees.  Distribution fees and/or
shareholder service fees shall be calculated and paid in accordance with
the terms of the then-effective plan pursuant to Rule 12b-l under the 1940
Act for the applicable class.  Distribution and shareholder service fees
currently authorized are as set forth in Exhibit I to this Plan.
3.  Conversion Privilege.  After a maximum holding period of six years from
the initial date of purchase, Class B shares convert automatically to Class
A shares of the same Portfolio.   Simultaneously, a portion of the Class B
Shares purchased through the reinvestment of Class B dividends or capital
gains distributions ("Dividend Shares") will also convert to Class A
Shares.  The portion of Dividend Shares that will convert at that time is
determined by the ratio of converting Class B non-Dividend Shares held by a
shareholder to that shareholder's total Class B non-Dividend Shares.  All
conversions pursuant to this paragraph 3 shall be made on the basis of the
relative net asset values of the two classes, without the imposition of any
sales load, fee, or other charge.
4.  Exchange Privileges.
 Class A: Shares of Class A may be exchanged for shares of (i) any other
Fidelity Advisor Fund: Class A; and (ii) any portfolio of Daily Money Fund
or Daily Tax-Exempt Money Fund, other than Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury
Portfolio: Class B, or Daily Money Fund: Treasury Only. 
 Class B: Shares of Class B may be exchanged for shares of (i) any other
Fidelity Advisor Fund: Class B; and (ii) Daily Money Fund: U.S. Treasury
Portfolio: Class B.
 Institutional Class: Shares of Institutional Class may be exchanged for
shares of (i) any other Fidelity Advisor Fund: Institutional Class; and
(ii) shares of any Fidelity Retail Fund offering an exchange privilege to
other Fidelity Retail Funds.
 
 Strategic Opportunities Fund: Initial Class and Municipal Bond Fund:
Initial Class: Shares of Strategic Opportunities Fund: Initial Class and
Municipal Bond Fund: Initial Class may be exchanged for shares of any
Fidelity Retail Fund offering an exchange privilege to other Fidelity
Retail Funds.
 
5.  Expense Allocations.  Expenses shall be allocated under this Plan as
follows:
 A.  Class expenses: The following expenses shall be allocated exclusively
to the applicable specific class of shares: (i) distribution and
shareholder service fees; (ii) transfer agent fees; and (iii) Blue Sky
state registration fees.  
 B.  Portfolio expenses: Expenses not allocated to specific classes as
specified above shall be charged to the Portfolio and allocated daily to
each class on the basis of the net asset value of that class in relation to
the net asset value of the Portfolio.
6.  Voting Rights.  Each class of shares governed by this Plan (i) shall
have exclusive voting rights on any matter submitted to shareholders that
relates solely to its arrangement; and (ii) shall have separate voting
rights on any matter submitted to shareholders in which the interests of
one class differ from the interests of any other class.
7.  Effective Date of Plan.  This Plan shall become effective upon the
first business day of the month following approval by a vote of at least a
majority of the Trustees of the Fund, and a majority of the Trustees of the
Fund who are not "interested persons" of the Fund, which vote shall have
found that this Plan as proposed to be adopted, including the expense
allocation, is in the best interests of each class individually and of the
Portfolio as a whole; or upon such other date as the Trustees shall
determine.  Any material amendment to this Plan shall become effective upon
the first business day of the month following approval by a vote of at
least a majority of the Trustees of the Fund, and a majority of the
Trustees of the Fund who are not "interested persons" of the Fund, which
vote shall have found that this Plan as proposed to be amended, including
the expense allocation, is in the best interests of each class individually
and of the Portfolio as a whole; or upon such other date as the Trustees
shall determine.
8.  Severability.  If any provision of this Plan shall be held or made
invalid by a court decision, statute, rule or otherwise, the remainder of
the Plan shall not be affected thereby.
9.  Limitation of Liability.  Consistent with the limitation of shareholder
liability as set forth in each Fund's Declaration of Trust or other
organizational document, any obligations assumed by any Portfolio or class
thereof, and any agreements related to this Plan shall be limited in all
cases to the relevant Portfolio and its assets, or class and its assets, as
the case may be, and shall not constitute obligations of any other
Portfolio or class of shares.  All persons having any claim against the
Portfolio, or any class thereof, arising in connection with this Plan, are
expressly put on notice of such limitation of shareholder liability, and
agree that any such claim shall be limited in all cases to the relevant
Portfolio and its assets, or class and its assets, as the case may be, and
such person shall not seek satisfaction of any such obligation from the
shareholders or any shareholder of the Fund, Class or Portfolio; nor shall
such person seek satisfaction of any such obligation from the Trustees or
any individual Trustee of the Fund. 
 
EXHIBIT I TO MULTIPLE CLASS OF SHARES PLAN FOR FIDELITY ADVISOR FUNDS
FUND/CLASS   SALES CHARGE   DISTRIBUTION FEE       SHAREHOLDER            
                            (AS A PERCENTAGE OF    SERVICE FEE            
                            AVERAGE NET ASSETS)    (AS A PERCENTAGE OF    
                                                   AVERAGE NET ASSETS)    
 
Municipal Bond Fund:                                       
 Initial Class         none                  none   none   
 Class A               front-end             0.25   none   
 Class B               contingent deferred   0.65   0.25   
 Institutional Class   none                  none   none   
 



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