AMERICAN ENTERPRISE VARIABLE ANNUITY ACCOUNT
497, 1997-05-21
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PAGE 1
AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity
____________________, 1997
Variable Annuity Prospectus

The AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity is a flexible premium variable annuity
contract offered by American Enterprise Life Insurance Company (American
Enterprise Life), a subsidiary of IDS Life Insurance Company (IDS Life), which
is a subsidiary of American Express Financial Corporation (AEFC). Purchase
payments may be allocated among different accounts, providing variable and/or
fixed returns and payouts. The annuity is available for individual retirement
accounts (IRAs), simplified employee pension plans (SEPs), and nonqualified
retirement plans.

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account

Sold by:  American Enterprise Life Insurance Company.
Administrative Office:  80 South Eighth Street, P.O. Box 534,
Minneapolis, MN  55440-0534.  Telephone:  800-333-3437.

This Prospectus contains information about the variable account that you should
know before investing. Refer to "The variable account" in this prospectus.

The Prospectus is accompanied or preceded by the following prospectuses: The
Retirement Annuity Mutual Funds (describing IDS Life Aggressive Growth Fund, IDS
Life Capital Resource Fund, IDS Life Managed Fund, IDS Life Special Income Fund,
and IDS Life Moneyshare Fund), and Putnam Variable Trust (describing Putnam VT
Diversified Income Fund, Putnam VT Global Growth Fund, Putnam VT Growth and
Income Fund, Putnam VT New Opportunities Fund and Putnam VT Voyager Fund).
Please read these documents carefully and keep them for future reference.

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.

American Enterprise Life is not a financial institution, and the securities it
offers are not deposits or obligations of, or guaranteed or endorsed by any
financial institution nor are they insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, the Federal Reserve Board or any other agency. Investments in the
annuity involve investment risk including the possible loss of principal.

A Statement of Additional Information (SAI) dated _______1997, (incorporated by
reference into this prospectus) filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC), is available without charge by contacting American Enterprise
Life at the telephone number above or by completing and sending the order form
on the last page of this prospectus. The table of contents of the SAI is on the
last page of this prospectus.




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PAGE 2
                                Table of contents

Key terms.....................................................
The AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity in brief.................
Expense summary...............................................
Condensed financial information (unaudited)...................
Financial statements..........................................
Performance information.......................................
The variable account..........................................
The funds.....................................................
     IDS Life Aggressive Growth Fund..........................
     IDS Life Capital Resource Fund...........................
     IDS Life Managed Fund....................................
     IDS Life Special Income Fund.............................
     IDS Life Moneyshare Fund.................................
     Putnam VT Diversified Income Fund........................
     Putnam VT Global Growth Fund.............................
     Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund.........................
     Putnam VT New Opportunities Fund.........................
     Putnam VT Voyager Fund...................................
The fixed account.............................................
Buying your annuity...........................................
     The retirement date......................................
     Beneficiary..............................................
     How to make payments.....................................
Charges.......................................................
     Contract administrative charge...........................
     Variable account administrative charge...................
     Mortality and expense risk fee...........................
     Withdrawal charge........................................
     Waiver of withdrawal charges.............................
     Premium taxes............................................
Valuing your investment.......................................
     Number of units..........................................
     Accumulation unit value..................................
     Net investment factor....................................
     Factors that affect variable subaccount
         accumulation units...................................
Making the most of your annuity...............................
     Automated dollar-cost averaging..........................
     Transferring money between subaccounts...................
     Transfer policies........................................
     Two ways to request a transfer or a withdrawal...........
Withdrawals from your contract................................
     Withdrawal policies......................................
     Receiving payment when you request a withdrawal..........
Changing ownership............................................
Benefits in case of death.....................................
The annuity payout period.....................................
     Annuity payout plans.....................................
     Death after annuity payouts begin........................
Taxes.........................................................
Voting rights.................................................
Substitution of investments...................................
Distribution of the contracts.................................
About American Enterprise Life................................



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PAGE 3
Regular and special reports...................................
      Services................................................
      Table of contents of the Statement of Additional
      Information.............................................




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PAGE 4
Key terms

These terms can help you understand details about your annuity.

Accumulation unit - A measure of the value of each variable subaccount before
annuity payouts begin.

Annuitant - The person on whose life or life expectancy the annuity payouts are
based.

Annuity - A contract purchased from an insurance company that offers
tax-deferred growth of the investment until earnings are withdrawn, and that can
be tailored to meet the specific needs of the individual during retirement.

Annuity payouts - An amount paid at regular intervals under one of several plans
available to the owner and/or any other payee. This amount may be paid on a
variable or fixed basis.

Annuity unit - A measure of the value of each variable subaccount used to
calculate the annuity payouts you receive.

Beneficiary - The person designated to receive annuity benefits in case of the
owner's or annuitant's death.

Close of business - When the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) closes, normally 3
p.m. Central time.

Code - Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

Contract value - The total value of your annuity before any applicable
withdrawal charge and any contract administrative charge have been deducted.

Contract year - A period of 12 months, starting on the effective date of your
contract and on each anniversary of the effective date.

Fixed account - An account to which you may allocate purchase payments. Amounts
allocated to this account earn interest at rates that are declared periodically
by American Enterprise Life.

Mutual funds (funds) - Mutual funds or portfolios, each with a different
investment objective. (See "The funds.") You may allocate your purchase payments
into variable subaccounts investing in shares of any or all these funds.

Owner (you, your) - The person who controls the annuity (decides on investment
allocations, transfers, payout options, etc.). Usually, but not always, the
owner is also the annuitant. The owner is responsible for taxes, regardless of
whether he or she receives the annuity's benefits.

Purchase payments - Payments made to American Enterprise Life for an annuity.



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PAGE 5
Qualified annuity - An annuity purchased for a retirement plan that is subject
to applicable federal law and any rules of the plan itself. These plans include:

o  Individual Retirement Annuities (IRAs)
o  Simplified Employee Pension Plans (SEPs)

All other annuities are considered nonqualified annuities.

Retirement date - The date when annuity payouts are scheduled to begin. This
date is first established when you start your contract. You can change it in the
future.

Systematic Investment Plan - A payment method you set up with your bank to
automatically make monthly investments to your annuity from your bank account
(SIP).

Valuation date - Any normal business day, Monday through Friday, that the NYSE
is open. The value of each variable subaccount is calculated at the close of
business on each valuation date.

Variable account - Consists of separate subaccounts to which you may allocate
purchase payments; each invests in shares of one mutual fund. The value of your
investment in each variable subaccount changes with the performance of the
particular fund.

Variable annuity - An insurance contract in which payouts to the owner vary
depending on the performance of the subaccounts. In a variable annuity, payouts
may increase or decrease.

Withdrawal charge - A deferred sales charge that may be applied if you make a
withdrawal from your annuity before the retirement date.

Withdrawal value - The amount you are entitled to receive if you fully withdraw
your annuity. It is the contract value minus any applicable withdrawal charge
and contract administrative charge.

The AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity in brief

Purpose: The AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity is designed to allow you to build
up funds for retirement. You do this by making one or more investments (purchase
payments) that may earn returns that increase the value of the annuity.
Beginning at a specified future date (the retirement date), the annuity provides
lifetime or other forms of payouts to you or to anyone you designate.

Ten-day free look: You may return your annuity to your agent or to our
Minneapolis administrative office within 10 days after it is delivered to you
and receive a full refund of the contract value. No charges will be deducted.
However, you bear the investment risk from the time of purchase until return of
the contract; the refund amount may be more or less than the payment you made.
(Exceptions: If the law so requires, all of your purchase payments will be
refunded.)




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PAGE 6
Accounts:  You may allocate your purchase payments among any or all
of:

o     ten variable subaccounts of the variable account, each of
      which invests in a mutual fund with a particular investment
      objective.  The value of each variable subaccount varies with
      the performance of the particular fund.  We cannot guarantee
      that the value at the retirement date will equal or exceed the
      total of purchase payments allocated to the variable
      subaccounts.  (p. 14)

o     one fixed account, which earns interest at rates that are
      adjusted periodically by American Enterprise Life.  (p. 18)

Buying the annuity: Your agent will help you complete and submit an application.
Applications are subject to acceptance at our Minneapolis administrative office.
You may buy a nonqualified annuity or a qualified annuity. Payment must be made
in a lump sum with the option of additional payments in the future.

o     Minimum initial payment - $2,000 (waived for SIPs)
o     Minimum additional payment - $50
o     Maximum total payment(s) (without prior approval) - $1,000,000

Transfers:  Subject to certain restrictions, you may redistribute
your money among accounts without charge at any time until annuity
payouts begin, and once per contract year among the variable
subaccounts thereafter.  You may establish automated transfers
among the fixed account and variable subaccount(s).  (p. 28)

Withdrawals:  You may withdraw all or part of your contract value
at any time before the retirement date.  You also may establish
automated partial withdrawals.  Withdrawals may be subject to
charges and tax penalties (including a 10% IRS penalty if
withdrawals are made prior to your reaching age 59 1/2) and may
have other tax consequences; also, certain restrictions apply.
(p. 31)

Changing ownership:  You may change ownership of a nonqualified
annuity by written instruction, however, such changes of
nonqualified annuities may have federal income tax consequences.
Certain restrictions apply concerning change of ownership of a
qualified annuity.  (p. 32)

Payment in case of death:  If you or the annuitant dies before
annuity payouts begin, we will pay the beneficiary an amount at
least equal to the contract value.  (p. 33)

Annuity payouts: The contract value of your investment can be applied to an
annuity payout plan that begins on the retirement date. You may choose from a
variety of plans to make sure that payouts continue as long as they are needed.
If you purchased a qualified annuity, the payout schedule must meet requirements
of the qualified plan. Payouts may be made on a fixed or variable basis, or
both. Total monthly payouts include amounts from each variable subaccount and
the fixed account. (p. 34)


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PAGE 7
Taxes:  Generally, your annuity grows tax-deferred until you fully
withdraw it or begin to receive payouts.  (Under certain
circumstances, IRS penalty taxes may apply.)  Even if you direct
payouts to someone else, you will be taxed on the income if you are
the owner.  (p. 36)

Charges:  Your AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity annuity is subject
to a $30 annual contract administrative charge, a 0.15% variable
account administrative charge, a 1.25% mortality and expense risk
fee, a withdrawal charge and any premium taxes that may be imposed
by state or local governments.  Premium taxes are deducted upon
total withdrawal or when annuity payouts begin.  (p. 21)

Expense summary

The purpose of this table is to help you understand the various costs and
expenses associated with the AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity.

You pay no sales charge when you purchase the AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity.
All costs that you bear directly or indirectly for the variable subaccounts and
underlying mutual funds are shown below. Some expenses may vary as explained
under "Contract charges."

Contract Owner Expenses*

Withdrawal charge

            (contingent deferred sales
            charge as percent of payments)

            Contract Years From                 Withdrawal Charge
            Payment Receipt                       Percentage
                   1                                  8%
                   2                                  7%
                   3                                  6%
                   4                                  5%
                   5                                  4%
                   6                                  2%
               Thereafter                             0%

            Annual Contract
            Administrative Charge:                  $30

Variable Account Annual Expenses

            Variable Account Administrative Charge
            (as a percentage of daily net asset value)......0.15%

            Mortality and Expense Risk Fee
            (as a percentage of daily net asset value)......1.25%

            Total Variable Account Annual Expenses..........1.40%




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PAGE 8
*Premium taxes imposed by some state and local governments may be
applicable.  They are not reflected.

Annual Operating Expenses of Underlying Mutual Funds (as a
percentage of average net assets)*
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                       IDS Life      IDS Life                  IDS Life
                       Aggressive    Capital      IDS Life     Special      IDS Life
                       Growth        Resource      Managed     Income       Moneyshare

<S>                       <C>          <C>          <C>         <C>            <C> 
Management fees           .60%         .60%         .59%        .59%           .50%

Other expenses            .09          .08          .07         .10            .06

Total                     .69%**       .68%**       .66%**      .69%**         .56%**

                       Putnam VT                     Putnam VT
                      Diversified     Putnam VT     Growth and    Putnam VT New    Putnam VT
                        Income      Global Growth     Income      Opportunities     Voyager

Management fees          .70%            .60%          .49%          .63%            .57%

Other expenses           .13             .16           .05           .09             .06

Total                    .83%+           .76%+         .54%+         .72%+           .63%+

  *Premium taxes imposed by some state and local governments are not reflected in this table.
 **Annualized operating expenses of underlying mutual funds at Dec. 31, 1996.
  +Operating expenses of the underlying mutual funds at Dec. 31, 1996.

Example:*

                        IDS Life       IDS Life                 IDS Life
                       Aggressive      Capital      IDS Life     Special       IDS Life
                         Growth        Resource      Managed     Income       Moneyshare

You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual
return and full withdrawal at the end of each time period:

 1 year                 $102.13        $102.03      $101.84     $102.13      $100.85

 3 years                 128.22         127.92       127.33      128.22       124.37

 5 years                 156.86         156.37       155.38      156.86       150.41

10 years                 250.59         249.59       247.60      250.59       237.56

You would pay the following expenses on the same investment assuming no
withdrawal or selection of an annuity payout plan at the end of each time
period:

 1 year                 $ 22.13        $ 22.03      $ 21.84     $ 22.13      $ 20.85

 3 years                  68.22          67.92        67.33       68.22        64.37

 5 years                 116.86         116.37       115.38      116.86       110.41

10 years                 250.59         249.59       247.60      250.59       237.56

                       Putnam VT                     Putnam VT
                      Diversified     Putnam VT     Growth and    Putnam VT New    Putnam VT
                        Income      Global Growth     Income      Opportunities     Voyager

You would pay the following expenses on a $1,000 investment, assuming 5% annual
return and full withdrawal at the end of each time period:

 1 year                $103.50        $102.82        $100.66        $102.42        $101.54

 3 years                132.35         130.29         123.77         129.11         126.44

 5 years                163.76         160.32         149.41         158.35         153.89

10 years                264.41         257.53         235.53         253.57         244.60



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PAGE 9
You would pay the following expenses on the same investment assuming no
withdrawal or selection of an annuity payout plan at the end of each time
period:

 1 year                $ 23.50        $ 22.82        $ 20.66        $ 22.42        $ 21.54

 3 years                 72.35          70.29          63.77          69.11          66.44

 5 years                123.76         120.32         109.41         118.35         113.89

10 years                264.41         257.53         235.53         253.57         244.60
</TABLE>

This example should not be considered a representation of past or future
expenses. Actual expenses may be more or less than those shown.

* In this example, the $30 annual contract administrative charge is approximated
as a .177% charge based on the estimated average contract size.

Condensed Financial Information (unaudited)

The following tables give per-unit information about the financial history of
each variable subaccount.

Condensed Financial Information (unaudited)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                             Period from
                                                      Year ended             Feb. 21 to
                                                      Dec. 31, 1996        Dec. 31, 1995*
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount EAG (Investing in shares of Aggressive Growth Fund)
<S>                                                          <C>                   <C>  
Accumulation unit value at beginning of period..........     $1.28                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.47                 $1.28
Number of accumulation units outstanding at end
of period (000 omitted).................................     1,324                   473
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount ECR (Investing in shares of Capital Resource Fund)
Accumulation unit value at beginning of period..........     $1.20                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.27                 $1.20
Number of accumulation units outstanding
at end of period (000 omitted)..........................     2,350                   818
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount EMG (Investing in shares of Managed Fund)
Accumulation unit value at beginning of period..........     $1.18                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.36                 $1.18
Number of accumulation units outstanding at end
of period (000 omitted).................................     1,546                   589
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount ESI (Investing in shares of Special Income Fund)
Accumulation unit value at beginning of period..........     $1.17                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.24                 $1.17
Number of accumulation units outstanding at end
of period (000 omitted).................................     1,377                   414
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount EMS (Investing in shares of Moneyshare Fund)
Accumulation unit value at beginning of period..........     $1.03                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.07                 $1.03
Number of accumulation units outstanding at end
of period (000 omitted).................................       241                   132
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
Simple yield............................................      3.26%                 3.53%
Compound yield..........................................      3.32%                 3.59%

*Operations commenced on Feb. 21, 1995



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PAGE 10
Condensed Financial Information continued

                                                                             Period from
                                                      Year ended             Feb. 21 to
                                                      Dec. 31, 1996        Dec. 31, 1995*
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount EDI (Investing in shares of Putnam VT
Diversified Income Fund)
Accumulation unit value at beginning of period..........     $1.15                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.23                 $1.15
Number of accumulation units outstanding at end
of period (000 omitted).................................     1,824                   601
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount  EGI  (Investing  in shares of Putnam  VT  Growth  and  Income  Fund)
Accumulation unit value at beginning of
period..................................................     $1.27                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.53                 $1.27
Number of accumulation units outstanding at end
of period (000 omitted).................................     3,655                 1,152
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subaccount ENO (Investing in shares of Putnam VT
New Opportunities Fund)
Accumulation unit value at beginning of period..........     $1.39                 $1.00
Accumulation unit value at end of period................     $1.51                 $1.39
Number of accumulation units outstanding at end
of period (000 omitted).................................     2,980                   691
Ratio of operating expense to average net assets........      1.50%                 1.50%
</TABLE>

*Operations commenced on Feb. 21, 1995

Financial statements

The SAI dated ______, 1997 contains:

the audited financials of the variable account including:

- - statements of net assets as of Dec. 31, 1996;

- - statements of operations for the year ended Dec. 31, 1996;

- - statements of changes in net assets for the year ended Dec. 31,
1996 and for the period from Feb. 21, 1995 (commencement of
operations) to Dec. 31, 1995.

the audited financial statements of American Enterprise Life
including:

- - balance sheets as of Dec. 31, 1996 and Dec. 31 1995; and

- - related statements of income and cash flows for each of the three
years in the period ended Dec. 31, 1996.

The SAI does not include financial statements for subaccounts EVO and EGG
because these are new subaccounts and do not have a performance history.

Performance information

Performance information for the variable subaccounts may appear from time to
time in advertisements or sales literature. In all cases, such information
reflects the performance of a hypothetical investment in a particular account
during a particular time period.



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PAGE 11
The performance figures are calculated on the basis of historical performance of
the funds. The performance figures relating to these funds assume that the
contract was offered prior to ____________, 1997, which it was not. Before the
subaccounts EVO and EGG began investing in Putnam VT Voyager and Putnam VT
Global Growth Funds, the figures show what the performance would have been if
these subaccounts had existed during the illustrated periods. Once these
subaccounts began investing in these funds, actual values are used for the
calculations.

Calculations are performed as follows:

Simple yield - IDS Life Moneyshare Subaccount: Income over a given seven-day
period (not counting any change in the capital value of the investment) is
annualized (multiplied by 52) by assuming that the same income is received for
52 weeks. This annual income is then stated as an annual percentage return on
the investment.

Compound yield - IDS Life Moneyshare Subaccount: Calculated like simple yield,
except that, when annualized, the income is assumed to be reinvested.
Compounding of reinvested returns increases the yield as compared to a simple
yield.

Yield - Special Income Subaccount: Net investment income (income less expenses)
per accumulation unit during a given 30-day period is divided by the value of
the unit on the last day of the period. The result is converted to an annual
percentage.

Average annual total return: Expressed as an average annual compounded rate of
return of a hypothetical investment over a period of one, five and 10 years (or
up to the life of the account if it is less than 10 years old). This figure
reflects deduction of all applicable charges, including the contract
administrative charge, variable account administrative charge, mortality and
expense risk fee, and withdrawal charge, assuming a full withdrawal at the end
of the illustrated period. Optional average annual total return quotations may
be made that do not reflect a withdrawal charge deduction (assuming no
withdrawal).

Aggregate total return: Represents the cumulative change in the value of an
investment over a specified period of time (reflecting change in a subaccount's
accumulation unit value). The calculation assumes reinvestment of investment
earnings and reflects the deduction of all applicable charges, including the
contract administrative charge, mortality and expense risk fee, variable account
administrative charge, and withdrawal charge, assuming a withdrawal at the end
of the illustrated period. Optional aggregate total return quotations may be
made that do not reflect a withdrawal charge deduction (assuming no withdrawal).
Aggregate total return may be shown by means of schedules, charts or graphs.

Performance information should be considered in light of the investment
objectives and policies, characteristics and quality of the fund in which the
subaccount invests and the market conditions during the given time period. Such
information is not intended to indicate future performance. Because advertised
yields and total


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PAGE 12
return figures include all charges attributable to the annuity, which has the
effect of decreasing advertised performance, subaccount performance should not
be compared to that of mutual funds that sell their shares directly to the
public. (See the SAI for a further description of methods used to determine
yield and total return for the subaccounts.)

If you would like additional information about actual performance, contact
American Enterprise Life at the address or telephone number on the cover.

The variable account

Purchase payments can be allocated to any or all of the subaccounts of the
variable account that invest in shares of the following funds:

                                                        Subaccount

IDS Life Aggressive Growth Fund                              EAG
IDS Life Capital Resource Fund                               ECR
IDS Life Managed Fund                                        EMG
IDS Life Special Income Fund                                 ESI
IDS Life Moneyshare Fund                                     EMS
Putnam VT Diversified Income Fund                            EDI
Putnam VT Global Growth Fund                                 EGG
Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund                             EGI
Putnam VT New Opportunities Fund                             ENO
Putnam VT Voyager Fund                                       EVO

Each variable subaccount meets the definition of a separate account under
federal securities laws. Income, capital gains and capital losses of each
subaccount are credited or charged to that subaccount alone. No variable
subaccount will be charged with liabilities of any other variable account or of
our general business. Each variable subaccount's net assets are held in relation
to the contracts described in this prospectus as well as other variable annuity
contracts that we issue that are not described in this prospectus.

The variable account was established under Indiana law on July 15, 1987, and the
subaccounts are registered together as a single unit investment trust under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (the 1940 Act). This registration does not
involve any supervision of our management or investment practices and policies
by the SEC. All obligations arising under the contracts are general obligations
of American Enterprise Life.

The funds

IDS Life Aggressive Growth Fund
Objective: capital appreciation.  Invests primarily in common stock
of small- and medium-size companies.

IDS Life Capital Resource Fund
Objective: capital appreciation.  Invests primarily in U.S. common
stocks and other securities convertible into common stock,
diversified over many different companies in a variety of
industries.


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PAGE 13
IDS Life Managed Fund
Objective: maximum total investment return.  Invests primarily in
U.S. common stocks, securities convertible into common stock,
warrants, fixed income securities (primarily high-quality corporate
bonds) and money market instruments.

IDS Life Special Income Fund
Objective: high level of current income while conserving the value
of the investment for the longest time period.  Invests primarily
in high-quality, lower-risk corporate bonds issued by many
different companies in a variety of industries, and in government
bonds.

IDS Life Moneyshare Fund
Objective: maximum current income consistent with liquidity and conservation of
capital. Invests in high-quality money market securities with remaining
maturities of 13 months or less. The fund also will maintain a dollar-weighted
average portfolio maturity not exceeding 90 days. The fund attempts to maintain
a constant net asset value of $1 per share.
   
Putnam VT Diversified Income Fund
Objective: high current income consistent with capital preservation by investing
in the following three sectors of the fixed income securities markets: a U.S.
Government Sector, a High Yield Sector (which invests primarily in securities
known as "junk bonds") and an International Sector. Consult the Putnam Variable
Trust prospectus for further information on the risks associated with this
fund's investments in higher-yield higher-risk fixed income securities.

Putnam VT Global Growth Fund
Objective:  capital appreciation through a globally diversified
portfolio of common stocks.

Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund
Objective: capital growth and current income by investing primarily
in common stocks that offer potential for capital growth, current
income, or both.

Putnam VT New Opportunities Fund
Objective: long-term capital appreciation by investing principally
in common stocks of companies in sectors of the economy which
Putnam Investment Management, Inc. ("Putnam Management") believes
possess above average long-term growth potential.

Putnam VT Voyager Fund
Objective:  capital appreciation by investing primarily in common
stocks of companies that Putnam Management believes to have
potential for capital appreciation that is significantly greater
than that of market averages.

More comprehensive information regarding each fund is contained in that fund
prospectus. You should read the fund prospectus and consider carefully, and on a
continuing basis, which fund or combination of funds is best suited to your
long-term investment needs. There is no assurance that the investment objectives
of the



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PAGE 14
funds will be attained nor is there any guarantee that the contract value will
equal or exceed the total purchase payments made. Some funds may involve more
risk than others. Please monitor your investment accordingly.
    
All funds are available to serve as the underlying investment for variable
annuities, and some funds also are available to serve as the underlying
investment for variable life insurance contracts. It is conceivable that in the
future it may be disadvantageous for variable annuity separate accounts and
variable life insurance separate accounts to invest in the available funds
simultaneously.

Although American Enterprise Life and the funds do not currently foresee any
such disadvantages either to variable annuity contract owners or to variable
life insurance policy owners, the boards of directors or trustees of the
appropriate funds will monitor events in order to identify any material
conflicts between such contract owners and policy owners and to determine what
action, if any, should be taken in response to a conflict. If a board were to
conclude that separate funds should be established for variable life insurance
and variable annuity separate accounts, the variable annuity contract holders
would not bear any expenses associated with establishing separate funds.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has issued final regulations relating to the
diversification requirements under Section 817(h) of the Code. Each mutual fund
intends to comply with these requirements.

The U.S. Treasury and the IRS have indicated that they may provide additional
guidance concerning how many variable subaccounts may be offered and how many
exchanges among variable subaccounts may be allowed before the owner is
considered to have investment control, and thus is currently taxed on income
earned within variable subaccount assets. We do not know at this time what the
additional guidance will be or when action will be taken. We reserve the right
to modify the contract, as necessary, to ensure that the owner will not be
subject to current taxation as the owner of the variable subaccount assets.

We intend to comply with all federal tax laws to ensure that the contract
continues to qualify as an annuity for federal income tax purposes. We reserve
the right to modify the contract as necessary to comply with any new tax laws.

IDS Life is the investment manager for each of the IDS Life funds and American
Express Financial Corporation is the investment advisor for each of the IDS Life
funds. Putnam Investment Management, Inc., is the investment manager for the
Putnam VT funds.

The investment managers and advisors cannot guarantee that the funds will meet
their investment objectives. Please read the funds' prospectuses for complete
information on investment risks, deductions, expenses and other facts you should
know before investing. These prospectuses are available by contacting American
Enterprise Life at the administrative office address or telephone number on the
front of this prospectus.


<PAGE>



PAGE 15
The fixed account

Purchase payments also may be allocated to the fixed account. The value of the
fixed account increases as interest is credited to the account. Purchase
payments and transfers to the fixed account become part of the general account
of American Enterprise Life, the company's main portfolio of investments.
Interest is credited and compounded daily to produce an effective annual
interest rate. We may change the interest rates from time to time.

Because of exemptive and exclusionary provisions, interests in the fixed account
have not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933 (1933 Act), nor is the
fixed account registered as an investment company under the 1940 Act.
Accordingly, neither the fixed account nor any interests in it are generally
subject to the provisions of the 1933 or 1940 Acts, and we have been advised
that the staff of the SEC has not reviewed the disclosures in this prospectus
that relate to the fixed account. Disclosures regarding the fixed account,
however, may be subject to certain generally applicable provisions of the
federal securities laws relating to the accuracy and completeness of statements
made in prospectuses.

Buying your annuity

Your agent will help you prepare and submit your application, and send it along
with your initial purchase payment to our Minneapolis administrative office. As
the owner, you have all rights and may receive all benefits under the contract.
The annuity can be owned in joint tenancy only in spousal situations. You cannot
buy a nonqualified annuity or become an annuitant if you are 86 or older (age 76
or older for qualified annuities).

When you apply, you may select:
o  the subaccount(s) and/or fixed account in which you want to
   invest;
o  how you want to make purchase payments;
o  the date you want to start receiving annuity payouts (the
   retirement date); and
o  a beneficiary.

If your application is complete, we will process it and apply your purchase
payment to your subaccount(s) and fixed account within two business days after
we receive it at our Minneapolis administrative office. If your application is
accepted, we will send you a contract. If we cannot accept your application
within five business days, we will decline it and return your payment. We will
credit additional purchase payments to your account(s) at the next close of
business after we receive and accept your payments at our Minneapolis
administrative office.

You may make monthly payments to your Annuity under a Systematic Investment Plan
(SIP). Under the SIP, you will make monthly payments into your annuity. To begin
the SIP, you will complete and send a form and your first payment along with
your application. You can stop your SIP payments at any time. If your contract
value is less than $2,000 and you have not made any SIP payments for six
consecutive months, we have the right to give you 30 days written


<PAGE>



PAGE 16
notice that your balance has fallen below the $2,000 threshold. If no additional
payments are made to your annuity, we may pay you the total value of your
annuity and cancel your contract.

The retirement date

Annuity payouts will be scheduled to begin on the retirement date. This date can
be aligned with your actual retirement from a job, or it can be a different
future date, depending on your needs and goals and on certain restrictions. You
can also change the date, provided you send us written instructions at least 30
days before annuity payouts begin.

For nonqualified annuities, the retirement date must be:

o  no earlier than the 60th day after the contract's effective
   date; and
o  no later than the annuitant's 85th birthday (or before the 10th contract
   anniversary, if purchased after age 75).

For qualified annuities, to avoid IRS penalty taxes, the retirement date
generally must be:

o  on or after the annuitant reaches age 59 1/2; and
o  by April 1 of the year following the calendar year when the
   annuitant reaches age 70 1/2.

If you are taking the minimum IRA distribution as required by the Code from
another tax-qualified investment, or in the form of partial withdrawals from
this annuity, annuity payouts can start as late as the annuitant's 85th birthday
or the 10th contract anniversary.

Beneficiary

If death benefits become payable before the retirement date, your named
beneficiary will receive all or part of the contract value. If there is no named
beneficiary, then you or your estate will be the beneficiary. (See "Payment in
case of death" for more about beneficiaries.)

Minimum initial payment

If SIP is concurrently set up:      $0 with application
If SIP is not concurrently set up:  $2,000 with application

Minimum additional purchase payment(s):     $50

Maximum payment(s):     $1,000,000 of cumulative payments without
                        prior approval

How to make payments

By letter

Send your check along with your name and contract number to:



<PAGE>



PAGE 17
Regular mail:

American Enterprise Life Insurance Company
80 South Eighth Street
P.O. Box 534
Minneapolis, MN  55440-0534

Express mail:

American Enterprise Life Insurance Company
Attention:  Unit 829
733 Marquette Avenue
Minneapolis, MN  55402

By SIP:

Contact your agent to complete the necessary SIP forms.

Charges

Contract administrative charge

This fee is for establishing and maintaining your records. We deduct $30 from
the contract value on your contract anniversary at the end of each contract
year. If you make payments to your annuity under a SIP, we will deduct the
contract administrative charge on any contract anniversary when your contract
value is $2,000 or more but less than $50,000. We will waive this charge when
the contract value is $50,000 or more on the current contract anniversary. If
you take a full withdrawal from your contract, the $30 annual charge will be
deducted at the time of withdrawal regardless of contract value. The annual
charge cannot be increased and does not apply after annuity payouts begin.

Variable account administrative charge
This charge is applied daily to the variable subaccounts and reflected in the
unit values of the subaccounts. Annually, it totals 0.15% of their average daily
net assets. It covers certain administrative and operating expenses of the
subaccounts such as accounting, legal and data processing fees and expenses
involved in the preparation and distribution of reports and prospectuses. The
variable account administrative charge cannot be increased.

Mortality and expense risk fee
This fee is to cover the mortality risk and expense risk and is applied daily to
the variable subaccounts and reflected in the accumulation unit values of the
subaccounts. The subaccounts pay this fee at the time dividends are distributed
from the funds in which they invest. Annually, the fee totals 1.25% of the
subaccounts' average daily net assets. Approximately two-thirds of this amount
is for our assumption of mortality risk, and one-third is for our assumption of
expense risk. This fee does not apply to the fixed account.

Mortality risk arises because of our guarantee to pay a death benefit and our
guarantee to make annuity payouts according to the terms of the contract, no
matter how long a specific annuitant


<PAGE>



PAGE 18
lives and no matter how long the entire group of American Enterprise Life
annuitants live. If, as a group, American Enterprise Life annuitants outlive the
life expectancy we have assumed in our actuarial tables, then we must take money
from our general assets to meet our obligations. If, as a group, American
Enterprise Life annuitants do not live as long as expected, we could profit from
the mortality risk fee. Expense risk arises because the contract administrative
charge and variable account administrative charge cannot be increased and may
not cover our expenses. Any deficit would have to be made up from our general
assets.

We may use any profits realized from the mortality and expense risk fee for any
proper corporate purpose, including, among others, payment of distribution
(selling) expenses. We do not expect that the withdrawal charge, discussed in
the following paragraphs, will cover sales and distribution expenses.

Withdrawal charge
If you withdraw part or all of your contract, you may be subject to a withdrawal
charge. The withdrawal amount you request is determined by drawing from your
total contract value in the following order:

1. First, we withdraw up to 10% of your prior anniversary contract value not yet
withdrawn this contract year. There is no withdrawal charge on withdrawals
totaling up to 10% of your prior anniversary contract value each contract year.

2. Next, we withdraw any contract earnings (contract value minus all purchase
payments received and not previously withdrawn) in excess of the annual 10% free
withdrawal amount. There is no withdrawal charge on contract earnings.

3. Next, if necessary, we withdraw purchase payments received seven or more
contract years before the withdrawal and not previously withdrawn. There is no
withdrawal charge on purchase payments received seven or more contract years
before withdrawal.

4. Finally, if necessary, we withdraw purchase payments received in the six
contract years before the withdrawal. There is a withdrawal charge on these
payments. We determine your withdrawal charges by multiplying each of these
payments by the applicable withdrawal charge percentage, and then totaling the
withdrawal charges.

The new payment charge percentage depends on the number of contract years since
you made the payment(s).

Contract Years From                           Withdrawal Charge
  Payment Receipt                                Percentage
         1                                           8%
         2                                           7%
         3                                           6%
         4                                           5%
         5                                           4%
         6                                           2%
    Thereafter                                       0%


<PAGE>



PAGE 19
Withdrawal charge calculation example

The following is an example of the calculation we would make to determine the
withdrawal charge on a contract with this history:

o     The contract date is July 1, 1997 with a contract year of July 1 through
      June 30 and with an anniversary date of July 1 each year

o     We received these payments - $10,000 July 1, 1997, $8,000 Dec.
      31, 2003 and $6,000 Feb. 20, 2005

o     The owner withdraws the contract for its total withdrawal
      value of $38,101 on Aug. 5, 2007 and had not made any other
      withdrawals during that contract year

o     The prior anniversary (July 1, 2007) contract value was
      $38,488

is calculated this way:

Withdrawal Charge    Explanation
     $0                 $3,848.80 is 10% of the prior anniversary value
                    withdrawn without withdrawal charge; and

     $0                 $10,252.20 is contract earnings in excess of
                    the 10% free withdrawal amount withdrawn
                         without withdrawal charge; and

     $0                 $10,000 July 1, 1997 payment was received seven
                        or more contract years before withdrawal and is
                        withdrawn without withdrawal charge; and

     $320               $8,000 Dec. 31, 2003 is in its fifth contract
                        year from receipt, withdrawn with a 4%
                        withdrawal charge; and

     $300               $6,000 Feb. 20, 2005 is in its fourth contract
                        year from receipt, withdrawn with a 5%
                        withdrawal charge.
     ----
     $620

The withdrawal charge is calculated so that the total amount minus the
withdrawal charge equals the amount you request when you request a partial
withdrawal. If you take a full withdrawal from your contract, the $30 contract
administrative charge also will be deducted.

Waiver of withdrawal charges There are no withdrawal charges for:

o     withdrawals during the year totaling up to 10% of your prior
      contract anniversary contract value;
o     contract earnings - if any - in excess of the annual 10% free
      withdrawal amount;



<PAGE>



PAGE 20
o     required minimum distributions from a qualified annuity after you reach
      age 70 1/2 (for those amounts required to be distributed from this annuity
      only);
o     contracts settled using an annuity payout plan; and
o     death benefits.

Your contract includes a "Waiver of Withdrawal Charges" provision. We will waive
withdrawal charges that are normally assessed upon a full or partial withdrawal
if both you and the annuitant are under age 76 on the date we issue the contract
and if you provide proof to us that, as of the date you request the withdrawal,
you or the annuitant are confined to a hospital or nursing home and have been
for the prior 60 days.

To qualify, the nursing home must meet the following criteria:

o     be licensed by an appropriate licensing agency to provide
      nursing care; and
o     provide 24-hour-a-day nursing services; and
o     have a doctor available for emergency situations; and
o     have a nurse on duty or on call at all times; and
o     maintain clinical records; and
o     have appropriate methods for administering drugs.

Possible group reductions: In some cases lower sales and administrative expenses
may be incurred due to the size of the group, the average contribution and the
use of group enrollment procedures. In such cases, we may be able to reduce or
eliminate the contract administrative and withdrawal charges. However, we expect
this to occur infrequently.

Premium taxes
Certain state and local governments impose premium taxes that may reach to 3.5%.
These taxes are dependent upon your state of residence or the state in which the
contract was sold. The deduction is made when you fully withdraw your contract
or when annuity payouts begin.

Valuing your investment

Here is how your fixed account and variable subaccounts are valued:

Fixed account: The amounts allocated to the fixed account are valued directly in
dollars and equal the sum of your purchase payments and transfer amounts plus
interest earned, less any amounts withdrawn or transferred and any contract
administrative charge.

Variable subaccounts: Amounts allocated to the variable subaccounts are
converted into accumulation units. Each time you make a purchase payment or
transfer amounts into one of the variable subaccounts, a certain number of
accumulation units are credited to your contract for that subaccount.
Conversely, each time you take a partial withdrawal, transfer amounts out of a
variable subaccount, or are assessed a contract administrative charge, a certain
number of accumulation units are subtracted from


<PAGE>



PAGE 21
your contract. Please remember that investment performance, expenses, and
deductions of certain charges affect accumulation unit value.

The accumulation units are the true measure of investment value in each
subaccount during the accumulation period. They are related to, but not the same
as, the net asset value of the underlying fund.

The dollar value of each  accumulation  unit can rise or fall daily depending on
the performance of the underlying mutual fund and on certain fund expenses. Here
is how unit values are calculated:

Number of units
To calculate the number of accumulation units for a particular subaccount, we
divide your investment after deduction of any premium taxes, by the current
accumulation unit value.

Accumulation unit value
The current accumulation unit value for each variable subaccount equals the last
value times the subaccount's current net investment factor.

Net investment factor Determined each business day by:

o     adding the underlying mutual fund's current net asset value per share plus
      per-share amount of any current dividend or capital gain distribution;
      then
o     dividing that sum by the previous net asset value per share;
      and
o     subtracting the percentage factor representing the mortality
      and expense risk fee and the variable account administrative
      charge from the result.

Because the net asset value of the underlying mutual fund may fluctuate, the
accumulation unit value may increase or decrease. You bear this investment risk
in a variable subaccount.

Factors that affect variable subaccount accumulation units Accumulation units
may change in two ways; in number and in value. Here are the factors that
influence those changes:

The number of accumulation units you own may fluctuate due to:

o     additional purchase payments allocated to the variable
      subaccount(s);
o     transfers into or out of the variable subaccount(s);
o     partial withdrawals;
o     withdrawal charges; and/or
o     contract administrative charges.

Accumulation unit values may fluctuate due to:

o     changes in net asset value of underlying mutual fund(s);
o     dividends distributed to the variable subaccount(s);
o     capital gains or losses of underlying mutual fund(s);



<PAGE>



PAGE 22
o     mutual fund operating expenses;
o     mortality and expense risk fees; and/or
o     variable account administrative charges.

Making the most of your annuity

Automated dollar-cost averaging*

You can use automated transfers to take advantage of dollar-cost averaging
(investing a fixed amount at regular intervals). For example, you might have a
set amount transferred monthly from a relatively conservative variable
subaccount to a more aggressive one, or to several others. The benefits of
dollar cost averaging also may be obtained by setting up regular automatic SIP
payments.

This systematic approach can help you benefit from fluctuations in accumulation
unit values caused by fluctuations in the market value(s) of the underlying
mutual fund(s). Since you invest the same amount each period, you automatically
acquire more units when the market value falls, fewer units when it rises. The
potential effect is to lower your average cost per unit. For specific features
contact your agent.

                         How dollar-cost averaging works
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                               Month       Amount       Accumulation   Number of units
                                          invested       unit value      purchased
<S>                            <C>         <C>              <C>            <C> 
By investing an                Jan         $100             $20            5.00
equal number of
dollars each month....         Feb          100              18            5.56

                               Mar          100              17            5.88

you automatically              Apr          100              15            6.67
buy more units
when the per unit              May          100              16            6.25
market price is low....
                               Jun          100              18            5.56

                               Jul          100              17            5.88

                               Aug          100              19            5.26

and fewer units                Sep          100              21            4.76
when the per unit
market price is                Oct          100              20            5.00
high.
</TABLE>

You have paid an average price of only $17.91 per unit over the 10 months, while
the average market price actually was $18.10.

Dollar-cost averaging does not guarantee that any variable subaccount will gain
in value nor will it protect against a decline in value if market prices fall.
Because this strategy involves continuous investing, your success with
dollar-cost averaging will depend upon your willingness to continue to invest
regularly through periods of low price levels. Dollar-cost averaging can be an
effective way to help meet your long-term goals.

* Some restrictions may apply.




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PAGE 23
Transferring money between subaccounts
You may transfer money from any one subaccount, or the fixed account, to another
before annuity payouts begin. Certain restrictions apply to transfers involving
the fixed account. If we receive your request before the close of business, we
will process it that day. Requests received after the close of business will be
processed the next business day. There is no charge for transfers. Before making
a transfer, you should consider the risks involved in switching investments.

We may suspend or modify transfer privileges at any time. The right to transfer
contract values between the subaccounts is subject to modification if we
determine, in our sole discretion, that the exercise of that right by one or
more contract owners is, or would be, to the disadvantage of other contract
owners. Any modification could be applied to transfers to or from some or all of
the subaccounts. These modifications could include, but not be limited to, the
requirement of a minimum time period between each transfer, not accepting
transfer requests of an agent acting under a power of attorney on behalf of more
than one contract owner or limiting the dollar amount that may be transferred
between the subaccounts and the fixed account by a contract owner at any one
time. We may apply these modifications or restrictions in any manner reasonably
designed to prevent any use of the transfer right we consider to be to the
disadvantage of other contract owners. (For information on transfers after
annuity payouts begin, see "Transfer policies.")

Transfer policies

o     You may transfer contract values between the variable subaccounts or from
      the subaccount(s) to the fixed account at any time. However, if you have
      made a transfer from the fixed account to the subaccount(s), you may not
      make a transfer from any subaccount back to the fixed account for six
      months following that transfer.

o     You may transfer contract values from the fixed account to the variable
      subaccount(s) on or within 30 days before or after the contract
      anniversary (except for automated transfers, which can be set up for
      transfer periods of your choosing subject to certain minimums).

o     If we receive your request on or within 30 days before or after the
      contract anniversary date, the transfer from the fixed account to the
      variable subaccount(s) will be effective on the day we receive it.

o     We will not accept requests for transfers from the fixed
      account at any other time.

o     Once annuity payouts begin no transfers may be made to or from the fixed
      account, but transfers may be made once per contract year among the
      variable subaccounts.




<PAGE>



PAGE 24
Two ways to request a transfer or a withdrawal

1     By letter

Send your name, contract number, Social Security number or taxpayer
identification number and signed request for a transfer or withdrawal to:

Regular mail:
American Enterprise Life Insurance Company
80 South Eighth Street
P.O. Box 534
Minneapolis, MN  55440-0534

Express mail:
American Enterprise Life Insurance Company
Attention:  Unit 829
733 Marquette Avenue
Minneapolis, MN  55402

Minimum amount
Mail transfers:         $500 or entire variable subaccount or fixed
                        account balance
Mail withdrawals:       $500 or entire variable subaccount or fixed
                        account balance

Maximum amount
Mail transfers:   Contract Value
Mail withdrawals: Contract Value

2     By automated transfers and automated partial withdrawals

Your agent can help you set up automated transfers among your subaccount(s) or
fixed account or partial withdrawals from the accounts.

You can start or stop this service by written request or other method acceptable
to American Enterprise Life. You must allow 30 days for American Enterprise Life
to change any instructions that are currently in place.

o     Automated transfers may not exceed an amount that, if continued, would
      deplete the fixed account or subaccount(s) from which you are transferring
      within 24 months.

o     Automated transfers and automated partial withdrawals are subject to all
      of the contract provisions and terms, including transfer of contract
      values between accounts. Automated withdrawals may be restricted by
      applicable law under some contracts.

o     Automated partial withdrawals may result in IRS taxes and
      penalties on all or part of the amount withdrawn.

Minimum amount
Automated transfers or withdrawals:             $100 monthly/$250
                                                quarterly, semiannually or
                                                annually


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PAGE 25
Maximum amount
Automated transfers or withdrawals:             Contract Value (except for
                                                automated transfers from
                                                the fixed account)

Withdrawals from your contract

As owner, you may withdraw all or part of your contract at any time before
annuity payouts begin by sending a written request to American Enterprise Life.
For total withdrawals we will compute the value of your contract at the close of
business after we receive your request. We may ask you to return the contract.
You may have to pay withdrawal charges (see "Withdrawal charge") and IRS taxes
and penalties (see "Taxes"). No withdrawals may be made after annuity payouts
begin.

Withdrawal policies
If you have a balance in more than one account and request a partial withdrawal,
we will withdraw money from all your sub accounts and/or fixed account in the
same proportion as your value in each correlates to your total contract value,
unless you request otherwise.

Receiving payment when you request a withdrawal

By regular or express mail:

o     Payable to owner.

o     Normally mailed to address of record within seven days after
      receiving your request.  However, we may postpone the payment
      if:

      -the withdrawal amount includes a purchase payment check that has not
      cleared; -the NYSE is closed, except for normal holiday and weekend
      closings; -trading on the NYSE is restricted, according to SEC rules; -an
      emergency, as defined by SEC rules, makes it impractical to sell
      securities or value the net assets of the accounts; or -the SEC permits us
      to delay payment for the protection of security holders.

NOTE:  You will be charged a fee if you request express mail
delivery.

Changing ownership

You may change ownership of your nonqualified annuity at any time by filing a
change of ownership on a form approved by us and sent to our Minneapolis
administrative office. The change will become binding upon us when we receive
and record it. We will honor any change of ownership request believed to be
authentic and will use reasonable procedures to confirm authenticity. If these
procedures are followed, we take no responsibility for the validity of the
change.




<PAGE>



PAGE 26
If you have a nonqualified annuity, you may lose your tax advantages by
transferring, assigning or pledging any part of it.
(See "Taxes.")

If you have a qualified annuity, you may not sell, assign, transfer, discount or
pledge your contract as collateral for a loan, or as security for the
performance of an obligation or for any other purpose to any person except
American Enterprise Life. However, if the owner is a trust or custodian, or an
employer acting in a similar capacity, ownership of a contract may be
transferred to the annuitant.

Benefits in case of death

If you or the annuitant dies (or, for qualified annuities, if the annuitant
dies) before annuity payouts begin, we will pay the beneficiary as follows:

For contracts where both the owner and annuitant were 75 or younger on the date
the contract was issued and if all withdrawals you have made from this contract
have been without withdrawal charges, the beneficiary receives the greater of:

1.    the contract value; or

2.    the total purchase payments paid less any amounts withdrawn;
      or

3.    on or after the fifth contract anniversary, the death benefit as of the
      most recent fifth contract anniversary adjusted by adding any purchase
      payments made since that most recent fifth contract anniversary and by
      subtracting any amounts withdrawn since that most recent fifth contract
      anniversary.

For contracts where both the owner and annuitant were 75 or younger on the date
the contract was issued and you have made withdrawals subject to withdrawal
charges, the beneficiary receives the contract value.

For contracts where either the owner or annuitant were 76 or older on the date
the contract was issued, the beneficiary receives the contract value.

If your spouse is sole beneficiary under a nonqualified annuity and you die
before the retirement date, your spouse may keep the annuity as owner. To do
this your spouse must, within 60 days after we receive proof of death, give us
written instructions to keep the contract in force.

Under a qualified annuity, if the annuitant dies before annuity payouts begin,
and the spouse is the only beneficiary, the spouse may keep the annuity as owner
until the date on which the spouse reaches age 70 1/2 or any other date
permitted by the Code. To do this, the spouse must give us written instructions
within 60 days after we receive proof of death.




<PAGE>



PAGE 27
Payments: We will pay the beneficiary in a single sum unless you have given us
other written instructions, or the beneficiary may receive payouts under any
annuity payout plan available under this contract if:

o  the beneficiary asks us in writing within 60 days after we
   receive proof of death;
o  payouts begin no later than one year after death, or other date
   as permitted by the Code; and
o  the payout period does not extend beyond the beneficiary's life
   or life expectancy.

When paying the beneficiary, we will determine the contract's value
at the next close of business after our death claim requirements
are fulfilled.  Interest, if any, will be paid from the date of
death at a rate no less than required by law.  We will mail payment
to the beneficiary within seven days after our death claim
requirements are fulfilled.  (See "Taxes.")

The annuity payout period

As owner of the contract, you have the right to decide how and to whom annuity
payouts will be made starting at the retirement date. You may select one of the
annuity payout plans outlined below, or we will mutually agree on other payout
arrangements. The amount available for payouts under the plan you select is the
contract value on your retirement date. No withdrawal charges are deducted under
the payout plans listed below.

You also decide whether annuity payouts are to be made on a fixed
or variable basis, or a combination of fixed and variable.  Amounts
of fixed and variable payouts depend on:
o  the annuity payout plan you select;
o  the annuitant's age and, in most cases, sex;
o  the annuity table in the contract; and
o  the amounts you allocated to the account(s) at settlement.

In addition, for variable payouts only, amounts depend on the investment
performance of the subaccount(s) you select. These payouts will vary from month
to month because the performance of the underlying mutual funds will fluctuate.
(In the case of fixed annuities, payouts remain the same from month to month.)

For information with respect to transfers between accounts after annuity payouts
begin, see "Transfer policies."

Annuity payout plans

You may choose any one of these annuity payout plans by giving us written
instructions at least 30 days before contract values are to be used to purchase
the payout plan:

o Plan A - Life annuity - no refund: Monthly payouts are made until the
annuitant's death. Payouts end with the last payout before the annuitant's
death; no further payouts will be made.




<PAGE>



PAGE 28
This means that if the annuitant dies after only one monthly payout has been
made, no more payouts will be made.

o Plan B - Life annuity with five, 10 or 15 years certain: Monthly payouts are
made for a guaranteed payout period of five, 10 or 15 years that you elect. This
election will determine the length of the payout period to the beneficiary if
the annuitant should die before the elected period has expired. The guaranteed
payout period is calculated from the retirement date. If the annuitant outlives
the elected guaranteed payout period, payouts will continue until the
annuitant's death.

o Plan C - Life annuity - installment refund: Monthly payouts are made until the
annuitant's death, with our guarantee that payouts will continue for some period
of time. Payouts will be made for at least the number of months determined by
dividing the amount applied under this option by the first monthly payout,
whether or not the annuitant is living.

o Plan D - Joint and last survivor life annuity - no refund: Monthly payouts are
made while both the annuitant and a joint annuitant are living. If either
annuitant dies, monthly payouts continue at the full amount until the death of
the surviving annuitant. Payouts end with the death of the second annuitant.

o Plan E - Payouts for a specified period (available as a fixed
payout only):  Monthly payouts are made for a specific payout
period of 10 to 30 years that you elect.  Payouts will be
made only for the number of years specified whether the annuitant
is living or not.  Depending on the time period selected, it is
foreseeable that an annuitant can outlive the payout period
selected.  In addition, a 10% IRS penalty tax could apply under
this payout plan.  (See "Taxes.")

Restrictions for some qualified plans: If you purchased a qualified annuity, you
must select a payout plan that provides for payouts:

o  over the life of the annuitant;
o  over the joint lives of the annuitant and a designated
   beneficiary;
o  for a period not exceeding the life expectancy of the
   annuitant; or
o  for a period not exceeding the joint life expectancies
   of the annuitant and a designated beneficiary.

If we do not receive instructions: You must give us written instructions for the
annuity payouts at least 30 days before the annuitant's retirement date. If you
do not, we will make payouts under Plan B, with 120 monthly payouts guaranteed.

If monthly payouts would be less than $20: We will calculate the amount of
monthly payouts at the time the contract value is used to purchase a payout
plan. If the calculations show that monthly payouts would be less than $20, we
have the right to pay the contract value to the owner in a lump sum or to change
the frequency of the payouts.


<PAGE>



PAGE 29
Death after annuity payouts begin

If you or the annuitant dies after annuity payouts begin, any amount payable to
the beneficiary will be provided in the annuity payout plan in effect.

Taxes

Generally, under current law, any increase in your contract value is taxable to
you only when you receive a payout or withdrawal. (However, see detailed
discussion below.) Any portion of the annuity payouts and any withdrawals you
request that represent ordinary income are normally taxable. You will receive a
1099 tax information form for any year in which a taxable distribution was made
according to our records.

Annuity payouts under nonqualified annuities: A portion of each payout will be
ordinary income and subject to tax, and a portion of each payout will be
considered a return of part of your investment and will not be taxed. All
amounts received after your investment in the annuity is fully recovered will be
subject to tax.

Tax law requires that all nonqualified deferred annuity contracts issued by the
same company to the same owner during a calendar year are to be taxed as a
single, unified contract when distributions are taken from any one of such
contracts.

Annuity payouts under qualified annuities: Under a qualified annuity, the entire
payout generally will be includable as ordinary income and subject to tax except
to the extent that contributions were made with after-tax dollars. If you or
your employer invested in your contract with pre-tax dollars as part of a
qualified retirement plan, such amounts are not considered to be part of your
investment in the contract and will be taxed when paid to you.

Withdrawals: If you withdraw part or all of your contract before your annuity
payouts begin, your withdrawal payment will be taxed to the extent that the
value of your contract immediately before the withdrawal exceeds your
investment. You also may have to pay a 10% IRS penalty for withdrawals made
prior to age 59 1/2. For qualified annuities, other penalties may apply if you
make withdrawals from your annuity before your plan specifies that you can
receive payouts.

Death benefits to beneficiaries: The death benefit under an annuity is not
tax-exempt. Any amount received by the beneficiary that represents previously
deferred income earnings within the contract is taxable as ordinary income to
the beneficiary in the year(s) he or she receives the payments.

Annuities owned by corporations, partnerships or trusts: For nonqualified
annuities any annual increase in the value of annuities held by such entities
generally will be treated as ordinary income received during that year. This
provision is effective for purchase payments made after Feb. 28, 1986. However,
if the trust was set up for the benefit of a natural person only, the income
remain tax-deferred.


<PAGE>



PAGE 30
Penalties: If you receive amounts from your contract before reaching age 59 1/2,
you may have to pay a 10% IRS penalty on the amount includable in your ordinary
income. However, this penalty will not apply to any amount received by you or
your beneficiary:

o  because of your death;
o  because you become disabled (as defined in the Code);
o  if the distribution is part of a series of substantially equal
   periodic payments, made at least annually, over your life or life expectancy
   (or joint lives or life expectancies of you and your beneficiary); or
o  if it is allocable to an investment before Aug. 14, 1982 (except
   for qualified annuities).

For a qualified annuity, other penalties or exceptions may apply if you make
withdrawals from your annuity before your plan specifies that payouts can be
made.

Withholding, generally: If you receive all or part of the contract value from an
annuity, withholding may be imposed against the taxable income portion of the
payment. Any withholding that is done represents a prepayment of your tax due
for the year. You take credit for such amounts on your annual tax return.

If the payment is part of an annuity payout plan, the amount of withholding
generally is computed using payroll tables. You may provide us with a statement
of how many exemptions to use in calculating the withholding. As long as you
have provided us with a valid Social Security number or taxpayer identification
number, you may elect not to have any withholding occur.

If the distribution is any other type of payment (such as a partial or full
withdrawal) withholding is computed using 10% of the taxable portion. Similar to
above, as long as you've provided us with a valid Social Security number or
taxpayer identification number, you may elect not to have this withholding
occur.

Some states may also impose withholding requirements similar to the federal
withholding described above. If this should be the case, any payment from which
federal withholding is deducted may also have state withholding deducted. The
withholding requirements may differ if payment is being made to a non-U.S.
citizen or if the payment is being delivered outside the United States.

Transfer of ownership of a nonqualified annuity: If you make such a transfer
without receiving adequate consideration, the transfer is considered a gift, and
also may be considered a withdrawal for federal income tax purposes. If the gift
is a currently taxable event for income tax purposes, the amount of deferred
earnings at the time of the transfer will be taxed to the original owner, who
also may be subject to a 10% IRS penalty as discussed earlier. In this case, the
new owner's investment in the annuity will be the value of the annuity at the
time of the transfer.




<PAGE>



PAGE 31
Collateral assignment of a nonqualified annuity: If you collaterally assign or
pledge your contract, earnings on purchase payments you made after Aug. 13, 1982
will be taxed to you like a withdrawal.

Important: Our discussion of federal tax laws is based upon our understanding of
these laws as they are currently interpreted. Federal tax laws or current
interpretations of them may change. For this reason and because tax consequences
are complex and highly individual and cannot always be anticipated, you should
consult a tax advisor if you have any questions about taxation of your contract.

Tax qualification

The contract is intended to qualify as an annuity for federal income tax
purposes. To that end, the provisions of the contract are to be interpreted to
ensure or maintain such tax qualification, notwithstanding any other provisions
of the contract. We reserve the right to amend the contract to reflect any
clarifications that may be needed or are appropriate to maintain such
qualification or to conform the contract to any applicable changes in the tax
qualification requirements. We will send you a copy of any such amendments.

Voting rights

As a contract owner with investments in the variable subaccount(s), you may vote
on important mutual fund policies until annuity payouts begin. Once they begin,
the person receiving them has voting rights. We will vote fund shares according
to the instructions of the person with voting rights.

Before annuity payouts begin, the number of votes you have is determined by
applying your percentage interest in each variable subaccount to the total
number of votes allowed to the subaccount.

After annuity payouts begin, the number of votes you have is equal to:

o     the reserve held in each subaccount for your contract;
o     divided by the net asset value of one share of the applicable
      underlying mutual fund.

As we make annuity payouts, the reserve for the contract decreases; therefore,
the number of votes also will decrease.

We calculate votes separately for each account. Notice of these meetings, proxy
materials and a statement of the number of votes to which the voter is entitled
will be sent.

We will vote shares for which we have not received instructions in the same
proportion as the votes for which we have received instructions. We also will
vote the shares for which we have voting rights in the same proportion as the
votes for which we have received instructions.



<PAGE>



PAGE 32
Substitution of investments

If shares of any fund should not be available for purchase by the appropriate
variable subaccount or if, in the judgment of American Enterprise Life's
management, further investment in such shares is no longer appropriate in view
of the purposes of the subaccount, investment in the subaccount may be
discontinued or another registered open-end management investment company may be
substituted for fund shares held in the subaccount(s) if American Enterprise
Life believes it would be in the best interest of persons having voting rights
under the contract. The variable account may be operated as a management company
under the 1940 Act or it may be deregistered under this Act if the registration
is no longer required. In the event of any such substitution or change, American
Enterprise Life, without the consent or approval of the owners, may amend the
contract and take whatever action is necessary and appropriate. However, no such
substitution or change will be made without the necessary approval of the SEC
and state insurance departments. American Enterprise Life will notify owners of
any substitution or change.

Distribution of the contracts

The contracts will be distributed by banks and financial institutions either
directly or through a network of third-party marketers. American Express
Financial Advisors Inc., the principal underwriter for the variable account,
will pay commissions for the distribution of the contracts to the broker-dealers
of the banks or financial institutions or the broker-dealers of the third-party
marketers who have entered into distribution agreements with American Express
Financial Advisors. These commissions will not be more than 7% of purchase
payments received on the contracts.

From time to time, American Enterprise Life may pay or permit other promotional
incentives, in cash or credit or other compensation.

About American Enterprise Life

AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity is issued by American Enterprise Life. American
Enterprise Life is a wholly-owned subsidiary of IDS Life, which is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of AEFC. AEFC is a wholly-owned subsidiary of American
Express Company. American Express Company is a financial services company
principally engaged through subsidiaries (in addition to AEFC) in travel related
services, investment services and international banking services.

American Enterprise Life is a stock life insurance company organized in 1981
under the laws of the state of Indiana. Its administrative office is located at
80 South Eighth Street, Minneapolis, MN 55402. Its statutory address is 100
Capitol Center South, 201 North Illinois Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204.
American Enterprise Life is licensed in the state of Indiana and it conducts a
conventional life insurance business.

American Express Financial Advisors Inc. is the principal
underwriter for the variable account.  Its home office is IDS Tower
10, Minneapolis, MN 55440-0010.  American Express Financial



<PAGE>



PAGE 33
Advisors is registered with the SEC under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 as
a broker-dealer and is a member of the National Association of Securities
Dealers, Inc. American Express Financial Advisors is a wholly-owned subsidiary
of AEFC.

The AEFC family of companies offers not only insurance and annuities, but also
mutual funds, investment certificates and a broad range of financial management
services.

Other subsidiaries provide investment management and related services for
pension, profit-sharing, employee savings and endowment funds of businesses and
institutions.

Regular and special reports

Services

To help you track and evaluate the performance of your annuity, American
Enterprise Life provides:

Quarterly statements showing the value of your investment.

Annual reports containing required information on the annuity and its underlying
investments.




<PAGE>



PAGE 34
Table of contents of the Statement of Additional Information

Performance information...............................
Calculating annuity payouts...........................
Rating agencies.......................................
Principal underwriter.................................
Independent auditors..................................
Saving for retirement.................................
Prospectus............................................
Financial statements -
          American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account
          American Enterprise Life Insurance Company
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
Please check the appropriate box to receive a copy of the Statement of
Additional Information for:

____ AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity

____ IDS Life Retirement Annuity Mutual Funds

____ Putnam Variable Trust

Mail your request to:

American Enterprise Life Insurance Company
80 South Eighth Street
P.O. Box 534
Minneapolis, MN 55440-0534

American Enterprise Life will mail your request to:

Your name _____________________________________________________

Address _______________________________________________________

City __________________________ State ____________ Zip ________



<PAGE>



PAGE 35
















                       STATEMENT OF ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

                                       for

                        AEL PREFERREDSM VARIABLE ANNUITY

                  AMERICAN ENTERPRISE VARIABLE ANNUITY ACCOUNT

                               ____________, 1997


American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account is a separate account
established and maintained by American Enterprise Life Insurance
Company (American Enterprise Life).

This Statement of Additional Information (SAI), dated ______, 1997, is not a
prospectus. It should be read together with the prospectus dated ______, 1997,
which may be obtained from your agent, or by writing or calling American
Enterprise Life Insurance Company at the address or telephone number below.



American Enterprise Life Insurance Company
Administrative Offices
80 South Eighth Street
P.O. Box 534
Minneapolis, MN  55440-0534
800-333-3437



<PAGE>



PAGE 36
                                TABLE OF CONTENTS

Performance Information...................................... 3

Calculating Annuity Payouts.................................. 6

Rating Agencies.............................................. 8

Principal Underwriter........................................ 8

Independent Auditors......................................... 8

Saving for Retirement........................................ 8

Prospectus................................................... 8

Financial Statements
        American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account
        American Enterprise Life Insurance Company



<PAGE>



PAGE 37
PERFORMANCE INFORMATION

The following performance figures are calculated on the basis of historical
performance of the funds. The performance figures relating to these funds assume
that the contract was offered prior to _____, 1997, which it was not. Before the
subaccounts began investing in these funds, the figures show what the
performance would have been if these subaccounts had existed during the
illustrated periods. Once these subaccounts began investing in these funds,
actual values are used for the calculations.

Calculation of Yield for the Subaccount investing in IDS Life Moneyshare Fund.

Simple yield for the subaccount investing in the IDS Life Moneyshare Fund will
be based on the: (a) change in the value of a hypothetical investment (exclusive
of capital changes) at the beginning of a seven-day period for which yield is to
be quoted; (b) subtracting a pro rata share of subaccount expenses accrued over
the seven-day period; (c) dividing the difference by the value of the subaccount
at the beginning of the period to obtain the base period return; and (d)
annualizing the results (i.e., multiplying the base period return by 365/7).

The value of the hypothetical subaccount includes the amount of any declared
dividends, the value of any shares purchased with any dividend paid during the
period and any dividends declared for such shares. The variable subaccount's
yield does not include any realized or unrealized gains or losses, nor does it
include the effect of any applicable surrender charge.

Calculation of compound yield begins with the same base period return used in
the calculation of yield, which is then annualized to reflect compounding
according to the following formula:

     Compound Yield = [(Base Period Return + 1) 365/7 ] -1

         Annualized Yield based on Seven-Day Period ended Dec. 31, 1996

Subaccount investing in:      Simple Yield        Compound Yield
IDS Life Moneyshare Fund          3.26%                3.32%

Calculation of Yield for the Subaccount investing in IDS Life
Special Income Fund.

For the subaccount investing in the IDS Life Special Income Fund quotations of
yield will be based on all investment income earned during a particular 30-day
period, less expenses accrued during the period (net investment income) and will
be computed by dividing net investment income per accumulation unit by the value
of an accumulation unit on the last day of the period, according to the
following formula:




<PAGE>



PAGE 38
                               YIELD = 2[(a-b + 1) 6 - 1]
                                          cd

where:     a = dividends and investment income earned during the
               period
           b = expenses accrued for the period (net of
               reimbursements)
           c = the average daily number of accumulation units outstanding
               during the period that were entitled to receive dividends
           d = the maximum offering price per accumulation unit on
               the last day of the period

Yield on the subaccount is earned from the increase in the net asset value of
shares of the fund in which the subaccount invests and from dividends declared
and paid by the fund, which are automatically invested in shares of the fund.

           Annualized yield based on 30-Day Period ended Dec. 31, 1996

Subaccount investing in:         Yield
IDS Life Special Income           7.22%

Calculation of average annual total return

Quotations of average annual total return for a subaccount will be expressed in
terms of the average annual compounded rate of return of a hypothetical
investment in the annuity contract over a period of one, five and 10 years (or,
if less, up to the life of the account), calculated according to the following
formula:

                                     P(1+T) n = ERV

where:     P = a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000
           T = average annual total return
           n = number of years
         ERV = Ending Redeemable Value of a hypothetical $1,000 payment made
               at the beginning of the one, five, or 10 year (or other) period
               at the end of the one, five, or 10 year (or other) period (or
               fractional portion thereof)




<PAGE>



PAGE 39
Average Annual Total Return For Period Ended Dec. 31, 1996

Average Annual Total Return with Withdrawal
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                               Since
Subaccount investing in:*                    1 Year     5 Year     10 Year     Inception
- -----------------------
IDS LIFE
<S>                                          <C>         <C>        <C>          <C> 
  Aggressive Growth Fund (1/92)               7.49%        --%         --%       10.09%
  Capital Resource Fund (10/81)              -0.39       6.50       12.10           --
  Managed Fund (4/86)                         8.24       8.80       10.74           --
  Moneyshare Fund (10/81)                    -3.06       2.08        3.84           --
  Special Income Fund (10/81)                -1.31       7.73        7.20           --

PUTNAM VT
  Diversified Income Fund (9/93)              0.38         --          --          4.36
  Global Growth (5/97)                       10.20      11.86          --         10.09
  Growth and Income Fund (2/88)              13.10      14.02          --         13.94
  New Opportunities Fund (5/94)               1.62         --          --         20.31
  Voyager Fund (5/97)                         5.97      15.81          --         17.16

Average Annual Total Return without Withdrawal

                                                                               Since
Subaccount Investing in:*                    1 Year     5 Year     10 Year     Inception
- -----------------------
IDS LIFE
  Aggressive Growth Fund (1/92)              14.49%        --%         --%         10.64%
  Capital Resource Fund (10/81)               6.36       6.81       12.10             --
  Managed Fund (4/86)                        15.24       9.08       10.74             --
  Moneyshare Fund (10/81)                     3.48       2.45        3.84             --
  Special Income Fund (10/81)                 5.37       8.03        7.20             --

PUTNAM VT
  Diversified Income Fund (9/93)              7.18         --          --            5.66
  Global Growth (5/97)                       17.20      12.11          --           10.09
  Growth and Income Fund (2/88)              20.10      14.26          --           13.94
  New Opportunities Fund (5/94)               8.52         --          --           22.02
  Voyager Fund (5/97)                        12.97      16.03          --           17.16
</TABLE>

 *inception dates of the funds are shown in parentheses.

Aggregate Total Return

Aggregate total return represents the cumulative change in value of an
investment for a given period (reflecting change in a subaccount's accumulation
unit value) and is computed by the following formula:

                                     ERV - P
                                        P

where:     P = a hypothetical initial payment of $1,000
         ERV = Ending Redeemable Value of a hypothetical $1,000
               payment made at the beginning of the one, five, or 10 year (or
               other) period at the end of the one, five, or 10 year (or other)
               period (or fractional portion thereof)

The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires that an assumption be made
that the contract owner withdraws the entire contract at the end of the one,
five and 10 year periods (or, if less, up to the life of the subaccount) for
which performance is required to be calculated. In addition, performance figures
may be shown without the deduction of a withdrawal charge.




<PAGE>



PAGE 40
Total return figures reflect the deduction of all applicable charges including
the contract administrative charge, the variable account administrative charge,
and mortality and expense risk fee.

Performance of the subaccount may be quoted or compared to rankings, yields, or
returns as published or prepared by independent rating or statistical services
or publishers or publications such as The Bank Rate Monitor National Index,
Barron's, Business Week, CDA Technologies, Donoghue's Money Market Fund Report,
Financial Services Week, Financial Times, Financial World, Forbes, Fortune,
Global Investor, Institutional Investor, Investor's Daily, Kiplinger's Personal
Finance, Lipper Analytical Services, Money, Morningstar, Mutual Fund Forecaster,
Newsweek, The New York Times, Personal Investor, Stranger Report, Sylvia
Porter's Personal Finance, USA Today, U.S. News & World Report, The Wall Street
Journal and Wiesenberger Investment Companies Service.

CALCULATING ANNUITY PAYOUTS

The Variable Account

The following calculations are done separately for each of the subaccounts of
the variable account. The separate monthly payouts, added together, make up your
total variable annuity payout.

Initial Payout:  To compute your first monthly payment, we:

o determine the dollar value of your annuity as of the valuation date seven days
before the retirement date and then deduct any applicable premium tax; then o
apply the result to the annuity table contained in the contract or another table
at least as favorable. The annuity table shows the amount of the first monthly
payment for each $1,000 of value which depends on factors built into the table,
as described below.

Annuity Units: The value of your subaccount is then converted to annuity units.
To compute the number credited to you, we divide the first monthly payment by
the annuity unit value (see below) on the valuation date on (or next day
preceding) the seventh calendar day before the retirement date. The number of
units in your subaccount is fixed. The value of the units fluctuates with the
performance of the underlying mutual fund.

Subsequent Payouts:  To compute later payouts, we multiply:

o the annuity unit value on the valuation date on or immediately preceding the
seventh calendar day before the payout is due; by o the fixed number of annuity
units credited to you.

Annuity Table:  The table shows the amount of the first monthly
payment for each $1,000 of contract value according to the age and,
when applicable, the sex of the annuitant.  (Where required by law,
we will use a unisex table of settlement rates.)  The table assumes



<PAGE>



PAGE 41
that the contract value is invested at the beginning of the annuity payout
period and earns a 5% rate of return, which is reinvested and helps to support
future payouts.

Annuity Unit Values:  This value was originally set at $1 for each
subaccount.  To calculate later value we multiply the last annuity
value by the product of:

o  the net investment factor; and

o the neutralizing factor. The purpose of the neutralizing factor is to offset
the effect of the assumed investment rate built into the annuity table. With an
assumed investment rate of 5%, the neutralizing factor is 0.999866 for a one day
valuation period.

Net Investment Factor:

This value is determined each business day by:

o adding the underlying mutual fund's current net asset value per share plus per
share amount of any current dividend or capital gain distribution; then o
dividing that sum by the previous net asset value per share; and o subtracting
the percentage factor representing the mortality and expense risk fee from the
result.

Because the net asset value of the underlying mutual fund may fluctuate, the net
investment factor may be greater or less than one, and the accumulation unit
value may increase or decrease. You bear this investment risk in a variable
subaccount.

The Fixed Account

Your fixed annuity payout amounts are guaranteed. Once calculated, your payout
will remain the same and never change. To calculate your annuity payouts we:

o take the value of your fixed account at the retirement date or the date you
have selected to begin receiving your annuity payouts; then o using an annuity
table, we apply the value according to the annuity payout plan you select; and o
the annuity payout table we use will be the one in effect at the time you choose
to begin your annuity payouts. The table will be equal to or greater than the
table in your contract.

RATING AGENCIES

The following chart reflects the ratings given to American
Enterprise Life by independent rating agencies.  These agencies
evaluate the financial soundness and claims-paying ability of
insurance companies based on a number of different factors.  This
information does not relate to the management or performance of the
variable subaccounts of AEL PreferredSM Variable Annuity.  This



<PAGE>



PAGE 42
information relates only to the fixed account and reflects American Enterprise
Life's ability to make annuity payouts and to pay death benefits and other
distributions from the annuity.

Rating agency                    Rating

A.M. Best                          A+
                               (Superior)

Duff & Phelps                     AAA

Moody's                           Aa2

PRINCIPAL UNDERWRITER

The principal underwriter for the accounts is American Express Financial
Advisors Inc. which offers the variable contracts on a continuous basis.

INDEPENDENT AUDITORS

The financial statements of American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account - AEL
PreferredSM Variable Annuity Subaccounts including the statements of net assets
as of Dec. 31, 1996, and the related statement of operations for the year ended
Dec. 31, 1996, and the statements of changes in net assets for the year ended
Dec. 31, 1996, and the period from Feb. 21, 1995 (commencement of operations) to
Dec. 31, 1995 and the financial statements of American Enterprise Life Insurance
Company (a wholly owned subsidiary of IDS Life Insurance Company) at Dec. 31,
1996 and 1995 and for each of the three years in the period ended Dec. 31, 1996,
appearing in this SAI, have been audited by Ernst & Young LLP, independent
auditors, as set forth in their reports thereon appearing elsewhere herein.

SAVING FOR RETIREMENT

You may have to save more for retirement because the average person lives 17
years in retirement. Social security and pensions will not cover your expenses
in retirement. Sixty cents of every retirement dollar must come from your
personal savings.

Sources:    Social Security Administration, U.S. Department of
            Health and Human Services.

PROSPECTUS

The prospectus dated _____, 1997, is hereby incorporated in this SAI by
reference.




<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account -- AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Net Assets*                                                                                        Dec. 31, 1996


                                                                          Segregated Asset Subaccounts
                                                   ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assets                                                  EAG            ECR            EMG             ESI            EMS
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                    <C>         <C>           <C>              <C>              <C>
Investments in shares of mutual funds,
at market value:
IDS Life  Aggressive Growth Fund -
124,152 shares at net asset value
of $15.66 per share (cost $1,944,162)                  $1,944,270  $             $            -   $           -    $        -
IDS Life Capital Resource Fund -
126,400 shares at net asset value
of $23.68 per share (cost $3,252,829)                           -       2,992,860             -               -             -
IDS Life Managed Fund, Inc. -
125,309 shares at net asset value
of $16.77 per share (cost $1,993,797)                           -             -       2,101,885               -             -
IDS Life Special Income Fund -
143,132 shares at net asset value
of $11.90 per share (cost $1,684,234)                           -             -               -       1,702,800             -
IDS Life Moneyshare Fund, Inc. -
256,743 shares at  net asset value
of $1.00 per share (cost $256,721)                              -             -               -               -       256,723
Putnam VT Diversified Income Fund -
199,566 shares at net asset value
of $11.27 per share (cost $2,151,028)                           -             -               -               -             -
Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund -
228,348 shares at net asset value
of $24.56 per share (cost $4,944,570)                           -             -               -               -             -
Putnam VT New Opportunities Fund -
261,611 shares at net asset value
of $17.22 per share (cost $4,340,197)                           -             -               -               -             -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        1,944,270     2,992,860       2,101,885       1,702,800       256,723
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends receivable                                            -             -               -          10,373         1,085
Accounts receivable from American Enterprise Life
for contract purchase payments                                257             -           2,756           2,728             -
Receivable from mutual funds for
share redemptions                                               -         5,217               -               -             -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets                                            1,944,527     2,998,077       2,104,641       1,715,901       257,808
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Liabilities
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payable to American Enterprise Life for:
  Mortality and expense risk fee                            2,102         3,236           2,227           1,809           277
  Contract terminations                                         -         5,217               -               -             -
  Administrative charge                                       420           648             446             362            55
Payable to mutual funds for investments
   purchased                                                  273             -           2,756          10,930           753
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities                                           2,795         9,101           5,429          13,101         1,085
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets applicable to contracts in
   accumulation period                                 $1,941,732    $2,988,976      $2,099,212      $1,702,800      $256,723
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulation units outstanding                          1,323,955     2,350,045       1,545,535       1,377,190       240,823
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value per accumulation unit                       $1.47         $1.27           $1.36           $1.24         $1.07
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Subaccounts EVO and EGG had no activity in 1996.

See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account -- AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Net Assets* - continued                                                             Dec. 31, 1996

                                                           Segregated Asset Subaccounts                Combined
                                                   ---------------------------------------------       Variable
Assets                                                  EDI            EGI            ENO              Combined
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                <C>             <C>           <C>             <C>
Investments in shares of mutual funds,
at market value:
IDS Life  Aggressive Growth Fund -
124,152 shares at net asset value
of $15.66 per share (cost $1,944,162)               $           -  $          -  $            -  $     1,944,270
IDS Life Capital Resource Fund -
126,400 shares at net asset value
of $23.68 per share (cost $3,252,829)                           -             -               -        2,992,860
IDS Life Managed Fund, Inc. -
125,309 shares at net asset value
of $16.77 per share (cost $1,993,797)                           -             -               -        2,101,885
IDS Life Special Income Fund -
143,132 shares at net asset value
of $11.90 per share (cost $1,684,234)                           -             -               -        1,702,800
IDS Life Moneyshare Fund, Inc. -
256,743 shares at  net asset value
of $1.00 per share (cost $256,721)                              -             -               -          256,723
Putnam VT Diversified Income Fund -
199,566 shares at net asset value
of $11.27 per share (cost $2,151,028)                   2,249,106             -               -        2,249,106
Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund -
228,348 shares at net asset value
of $24.56 per share (cost $4,944,570)                           -     5,608,219               -        5,608,219
Putnam VT New Opportunities Fund -
261,611 shares at net asset value
of $17.22 per share (cost $4,340,197)                           -             -       4,504,945        4,504,945
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        2,249,106     5,608,219       4,504,945       21,360,808
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dividends receivable                                            -             -               -           11,458
Accounts receivable from American Enterprise Life
for contract purchase payments                              4,148         4,488          92,319          106,696
Receivable from mutual funds for
share redemptions                                               -             -               -            5,217
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets                                            2,253,254     5,612,707       4,597,264       21,484,179
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Liabilities
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Payable to American Enterprise Life for:
  Mortality and expense risk fee                            2,427         6,057           4,748           22,883
  Contract terminations                                         -             -               -            5,217
  Administrative charge                                       485         1,211             949            4,576
Payable to mutual funds for investments
   purchased                                                4,148         4,488          92,319          115,667
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total liabilities                                           7,060        11,756          98,016          148,343
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets applicable to contracts in
   accumulation period                                 $2,246,194    $5,600,951      $4,499,248      $21,335,836
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulation units outstanding                          1,824,245     3,655,312       2,979,587
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net asset value per accumulation unit                       $1.23         $1.53           $1.51
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Subaccounts EVO and EGG had no activity in 1996.

See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account -- AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Operations*                                                               Year ended Dec. 31, 1996


                                                                   Segregated Asset Subaccounts
                                         -----------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            EAG               ECR             EMG           ESI           EMS
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                      <C>               <C>            <C>            <C>            <C>
Investment income:
Dividend income from mutual funds        $195,247          $ 447,677      $ 161,548      $ 92,432       $  6,603
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses:
Mortality and expense risk fee             16,404             26,117         17,962        14,742          1,685
Administrative charge                       3,281              5,224          3,592         2,948            337
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total expenses                             19,685             31,341         21,554        17,690          2,022
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment income (loss) - net            175,562            416,336        139,994        74,742          4,581
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments - net

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Realized gain (loss) on sales of investments in mutual funds:
Proceeds from sales                        95,714            117,410        120,540       152,258        153,012
Cost of investments sold                   90,385            119,504        113,153       153,718        153,013
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net realized gain (loss) on investments     5,329             (2,094)         7,387        (1,460)            (1)
Net change in unrealized appreciation
or depreciation of investments            (25,579)          (287,096)        83,860         5,443              2
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net gain (loss) on investments            (20,250)          (289,190)        91,247         3,983              1
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase from operations             $155,312          $ 127,146      $ 231,241      $ 78,725       $  4,582
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Subaccounts EVO and EGG had no activity in the year ended Dec. 31, 1996.

See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account --
AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Operations* - continued                                       Year ended Dec. 31, 1996

                                                  Segregated Asset Subaccounts              Combined
                                         ------------------------------------------         Variable
                                            EDI                EGI            ENO            Account
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                      <C>               <C>            <C>            <C>
Investment income:
Dividend income from mutual funds        $ 78,310          $ 157,276      $       -      $ 1,139,093
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Expenses:
Mortality and expense risk fee             19,862             45,020         37,601          179,393
Administrative charge                       3,972              9,004          7,520           35,878
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total expenses                             23,834             54,024         45,121          215,271
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment income (loss) - net             54,476            103,252        (45,121)         923,822
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Realized and Unrealized Gain (Loss) on Investments - net

- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Realized gain (loss) on sales of investments in mutual funds:
Proceeds from sales                       200,600            124,207         94,415        1,058,156
Cost of investments sold                  198,770            116,565         87,298        1,032,406
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net realized gain (loss) on investments     1,830              7,642          7,117           25,750
Net change in unrealized appreciation
or depreciation of investments             73,352            575,348         94,114          519,444
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net gain (loss) on investments             75,182            582,990        101,231          545,194
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase from operations             $129,658          $ 686,242      $  56,110      $ 1,469,016
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Subaccounts EVO and EGG had no activity in the year ended Dec. 31, 1996.

See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>
<PAGE>

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account -- AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Changes in Net Assets*                                                      Year ended Dec. 31, 1996


                                                                 Segregated Asset Subaccounts
                                         -------------------------------------------------------------------------
Operations                                   EAG               ECR             EMG           ESI             EMS
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                     <C>                <C>            <C>            <C>             <C>
Investment income (loss) - net          $   175,562        $  416,336     $   139,994    $   74,742      $   4,581
Net realized gain (loss) on investments       5,329            (2,094)          7,387        (1,460)            (1)
Net change in unrealized appreciation
or depreciation of investments              (25,579)         (287,096)         83,860         5,443              2
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase from operations                155,312           127,146         231,241        78,725          4,582
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contract Transactions
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Variable annuity contract
purchase payments                         1,188,007         1,819,729       1,299,140     1,330,728        277,016
Net transfers**                              44,944           160,697         (54,922)     (128,604)      (160,372)
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits and contract charges     (52,750)          (96,464)        (52,330)      (45,696)           (67)
Death benefits                                    -                 -         (18,177)      (17,536)             -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase from contract transactions       1,180,201         1,883,962       1,173,711     1,138,892        116,577
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at beginning of year             606,219           977,868         694,260       485,183        135,564
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at end of year               $ 1,941,732        $2,988,976     $ 2,099,212    $1,702,800      $ 256,723
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Accumulation Unit Activity
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at beginning of year      473,162           817,655         588,760       413,748        131,600
Contract purchase payments                  858,107         1,485,938       1,062,502     1,131,063        263,096
Net transfers**                              32,975           129,540         (44,426)     (109,946)      (153,809)
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits and contract charges     (40,289)          (83,088)        (46,345)      (42,442)           (64)
Death benefits                                    -                 -         (14,956)      (15,233)             -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at end of year          1,323,955         2,350,045       1,545,535     1,377,190        240,823
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Subaccounts EVO and EGG had no activity in the year ended Dec. 31, 1996.
**Includes  transfer  activity from (to) other Accounts and transfers  (from) to
American Enterprise Life for conversion from (to) Fixed Account.

See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account -- AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Changes in Net Assets* - continued                              Year ended Dec. 31, 1996

                                                  Segregated Asset Subaccounts                Combined
                                         --------------------------------------------         Variable
Operations                                   EDI               EGI             ENO             Account
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                      <C>               <C>            <C>             <C>
Investment income (loss) - net           $   54,476        $  103,252     $   (45,121)    $    923,822
Net realized gain (loss) on investments       1,830             7,642           7,117           25,750
Net change in unrealized appreciation
or depreciation of investments               73,352           575,348          94,114          519,444
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase from operations                129,658           686,242          56,110        1,469,016
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contract Transactions
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Variable annuity contract
purchase payments                         1,660,528         3,170,351       3,175,961       13,921,460
Net transfers**                            (184,094)          427,988         411,509          517,146
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits and contract charges     (49,780)         (140,638)       (102,255)        (539,980)
Death benefits                                    -            (9,662)              -          (45,375)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase from contract transactions       1,426,654         3,448,039       3,485,215       13,853,251
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at beginning of year             689,882         1,466,670         957,923        6,013,569
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at end of year                $2,246,194        $5,600,951     $ 4,499,248     $ 21,335,836
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Accumulation Unit Activity
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at beginning of year      600,567         1,151,991         690,849
Contract purchase payments                1,425,924         2,299,290       2,086,487
Net transfers**                            (156,974)          310,542         275,115
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits and contract charges     (45,272)          (99,565)        (72,864)
Death benefits                                    -            (6,946)              -
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at end of year          1,824,245         3,655,312       2,979,587
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
*Subaccounts EVO and EGG had no activity in the year ended Dec. 31, 1996.
**Includes  transfer  activity from (to) other Accounts and transfers  (from) to
American Enterprise Life for conversion from (to) Fixed Account.

See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>


<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account --
AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Changes in Net Assets       For the period Feb. 21, 1995 (commencement
                                                     of operations) to Dec. 31, 1995

                                          Segregated Asset Subaccounts             
                            --------------------------------------------------------
Operations                    EAG          ECR         EMG         ESI         EMS 
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>
Investment income
(loss) - net                $   (906)   $ 23,141    $  2,580    $  6,298    $  2,095
Net realized gain
(loss) on investments          1,049       1,094         868         403           -
Net change in unrealized
appreciation or
depreciation of
investments                   25,687      27,127      24,228      13,123           -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase from operations  25,830      51,362      27,676      19,824       2,095
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contract Transactions                                                              
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Variable annuity contract
purchase payments            557,366     906,083     668,364     465,579     192,695
Net transfers*                27,715      26,610         816         445     (59,226)
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits            (4,692)     (6,187)     (2,596)       (665)          -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase from
contract transactions        580,389     926,506     666,584     465,359     133,469
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at beginning
of period                          -           -           -           -           -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at end
of period                   $606,219    $977,868    $694,260    $485,183    $135,564
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulation Unit Activity                                                         
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at
beginning of period                -           -           -           -           -
Contract purchase payments   454,945     800,247     590,321     413,918     189,518
Net transfers*                22,093      22,925         767         434     (57,918)
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits            (3,876)     (5,517)     (2,328)       (604)          -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at
end of period                473,162     817,655     588,760     413,748     131,600
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Includes transfer activity from (to) other Accounts and transfers from (to)
American Enterprise Life for conversion from (to) the fixed account.
See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account --
AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Statements of Changes in Net Assets -- continued

                                    For the period Feb. 21, 1995 (commencement
                                               of operations) to Dec. 31, 1995

                                                                      Combined
                                __Segregated Asset Subaccounts__      Variable
Operations                         EDI         EGI        ENO          Account
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>
Investment income
(loss) - net                   $   (685)    $ (2,627)   $ (2,738)   $   27,158
Net realized gain
(loss) on investments               272        1,557       1,494         6,737
Net change in unrealized
appreciation  or
depreciation of
investments                      24,726       88,301      70,635       273,827
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net increase
from operations                  24,313       87,231      69,391       307,722
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contract Transactions
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Variable annuity contract
purchase payments               667,230    1,410,722     887,679     5,755,718
Net transfers*                      447        9,040      20,208        26,055
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits               (2,108)     (40,323)    (19,355)      (75,926)
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Increase from
contract transactions           665,569    1,379,439     888,532     5,705,847
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at beginning
of period                             -            -           -             -
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Net assets at end
of period                      $689,882   $1,466,670    $957,923    $6,013,569
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accumulation Unit Activity
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at
beginning of period                   -            -           -
Contract purchase
payments                        602,054    1,177,088     690,494
Net transfers*                      430        7,402      15,447
Contract terminations:
Surrender benefits               (1,917)     (32,499)    (15,092) 
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
Units outstanding at
end of period                   600,567    1,151,991     690,849
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
* Includes transfer activity from (to) other Accounts and transfers from (to)
American  Enterprise  Life for conversion  from (to) the fixed account. 
See accompanying notes to financial statements.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>


American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account -- 
AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts

Notes to Financial Statements
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Organization

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account (the Account) was established under
Indiana law on July 15, 1987 and the  subaccounts  are registered  together as a
single unit  investment  trust of American  Enterprise  Life  Insurance  Company
(American  Enterprise Life) under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended
(the "1940 Act"). Operations of the Account commenced on Feb. 21, 1995.

The Account is comprised of various  subaccounts.  The assets of each subaccount
of the Account are not chargeable with  liabilities  arising out of the business
conducted  by any other  subaccount,  account or by  American  Enterprise  Life.
Purchase  payments are allocated to any or all of ten subaccounts of the Account
or the fixed account.  The purchase  payments  allocated to the  subaccounts are
then invested in shares of five funds of the IDS Life Retirement  Annuity Mutual
Funds  (collectively,  the IDS Life Funds), or in shares of five funds of Putnam
Variable  Trust  (collectively,  Putnam Funds)  formerly known as Putnam Capital
Manager Trust.

The IDS Life Funds are registered  under the 1940 Act as  diversified,  open-end
management  investment  companies.  IDS Life  Capital  Resource  Fund,  IDS Life
Special Income Fund and IDS Life Moneyshare Fund, Inc. commenced operations Oct.
13, 1981. IDS Life Managed Fund, Inc.  commenced  operations April 30, 1986. IDS
Life  Aggressive  Growth Fund  commenced  operations on Jan. 13, 1992.  Purchase
payments allocated to the EAG subaccount invest in shares of IDS Life Aggressive
Growth Fund; the ECR subaccount  invests in shares of IDS Life Capital  Resource
Fund;  the EMG  subaccount  invests  in shares  of IDS Life  Managed  Fund;  ESI
subaccount  invests  in  shares of IDS Life  Special  Income  Fund;  and the EMS
subaccount invests in shares of IDS Life Moneyshare Fund.

Putnam  Variable  Trust  was  organized  on Sept.  24,  1987 as a  Massachusetts
business trust and is registered  under the 1940 Act as a diversified,  open-end
management  investment company.  The Putnam VT Diversified Income Fund commenced
operations  on Sept.  15, 1993.  The Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund  commenced
operations  on Feb.  1, 1988.  The Putnam VT New  Opportunities  Fund  commenced
operations on May 2, 1994.  The Putnam VT Voyager Fund  commenced  operations on
Feb. 1, 1988.  The Putnam VT Global Growth Fund  commenced  operations on May 1,
1990.  Purchase payments allocated to the EDI subaccount invest in shares of the
Putnam VT Diversified  Income Fund; the EGI subaccount  invests in shares of the
Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund;  the ENO  subaccount  invests in shares of the
Putnam VT New  Opportunities  Fund; the EVO subaccount  invests in shares of the
Putnam VT Voyager Fund and the EGG subaccount invests in shares of the Putnam VT
Global Growth Fund.  The EVO and EGG  subaccounts  will  commence  operations in
1997.

American Enterprise Life issues the contracts which are distributed by banks and
financial  institutions  either  directly  or through a network  of  third-party
marketers.  IDS Life Insurance  Company,  parent company of American  Enterprise
Life,  serves as  investment  manager  and  distributor  for the IDS Life Funds.
American Express Financial  Corporation  serves as investment advisor to the IDS
Life  Funds.  Putnam  Investment  Management,  Inc.  serves as the Putnam  Funds
investment  manager.  Putnam  Mutual Funds serves as  distributor  and principal
underwriter for the Putnam Funds.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Summary of Significant Accounting Policies

Investments in Mutual Funds
Investments  in shares of the IDS Life Funds or the Putnam Funds  (collectively,
the Funds) are stated at market  value which is the net asset value per share as
determined by the respective fund. Investment  transactions are accounted for on
the date the shares are purchased  and sold.  The cost of  investments  sold and
redeemed  is  determined  on the average  cost  method.  Dividend  distributions
received from the Funds are reinvested,  net of any expenses payable to American
Enterprise Life, in additional shares of the Funds and are recorded as income by
the subaccounts on the ex-dividend date.

Unrealized  appreciation  or  depreciation  of investments  in the  accompanying
financial   statements   represents  the   subaccounts'   share  of  the  Funds'
undistributed net investment income, undistributed realized gain or loss and the
unrealized appreciation or depreciation on their investment securities.

Federal Income Taxes
American  Enterprise Life is taxed as a life insurance  company.  The Account is
treated as part of American  Enterprise  Life for federal  income tax  purposes.
Under existing  federal income tax law, no income taxes are payable with respect
to any investment income of the Account.

<PAGE>

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
3.  Mortality and Expense Risk Fee

American  Enterprise  Life makes  guarantees to the Account that possible future
adverse  changes in  administrative  expenses and  mortality  experience  of the
annuitants will not affect the Account.  The mortality and expense risk fee paid
to American Enterprise Life is applied daily to the subaccounts and reflected in
the accumulation unit values of the subaccounts. The subaccounts pay this fee at
the time dividends are  distributed  from the Funds in which they invest.  It is
equal, on an annual basis, to 1.25 percent of the subaccounts  average daily net
assets. This fee does not apply to the fixed account.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
4.  Administrative Charge

American  Enterprise  Life deducts a daily charge equal,  on an annual basis, to
0.15  percent  of the  average  daily net assets of each  subaccount.  It covers
certain  administrative  and operating  expenses of the subaccounts  incurred by
American Enterprise Life such as accounting,  legal and data processing fees and
expenses   involved  in  the  preparation   and   distribution  of  reports  and
prospectuses. This charge cannot be increased.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
5.  Contract Administrative Charge

American  Enterprise  Life deducts an  administrative  charge of $30 per year on
each contract  anniversary.  This charge reimburses American Enterprise Life for
expenses  incurred in establishing and maintaining the annuity  records.  If you
make payments to your annuity under a simplified employee pension plan (SEP), we
will deduct the contract  administrative charge on any contract anniversary when
your contract value is $2,000 or more but less than $50,000. This charge will be
waived  when the  contract  value is  $50,000  or more on the  current  contract
anniversary.

The $30 annual charge will be deducted at the time of any full  surrender.  This
charge  cannot be  increased  and does not apply after  annuity  payouts  begin.
American Enterprise Life does not expect to profit from this charge.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
6.  Withdrawal Charge

American Enterprise Life will use a withdrawal charge to help it recover certain
expenses  relating to the sale of the  annuity.  The  withdrawal  charge will be
deducted for withdrawals during the first six payment years following a purchase
payment.  Charges by American  Enterprise Life for withdrawals are not available
on an individual  segregated asset subaccount basis.  Charges for all segregated
asset subaccounts amounted to $34,957 in 1996 and $nil in 1995. Such charges are
not an  expense  of the  subaccounts  or the  Account.  They are  deducted  from
contract  withdrawal benefits paid by American Enterprise Life. This charge will
be waived if the withdrawal meets certain provisions as stated in the contract.

- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
7.  Investment Transactions

The  subaccounts'   purchases  of  Fund  shares  (net  of  charges),   including
reinvestment of dividend distributions, were as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                        Year ended Dec. 31,
Subaccount     Investment                                             1996            1995 *
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>          <C>                                                 <C>              <C>       
EAG          IDS Life Aggressive Growth Fund...............      $ 1,453,339      $  606,633
ECR          IDS Life Capital Resource Fund................        2,420,544         978,959
EMG          IDS Life Managed Fund, Inc....................        1,436,211         691,443
ESI          IDS Life Special Income Fund..................        1,365,892         491,218
EMS          IDS Life Moneyshare Fund, Inc.................          274,170         199,964
EDI          Putnam VT Diversified Income Fund.............        1,683,881         683,408
EGI          Putnam VT Growth and Income Fund..............        3,681,192       1,410,167
ENO          Putnam VT New Opportunities Fund..............        3,539,234         912,517
EVO          Putnam VT Voyager Fund........................               --**            --
EGG          Putnam VT Global Growth Fund..................               --**            --
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                 $15,854,463      $5,974,309
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 *For the period Feb. 21, 1995 (commencement of operations) to Dec. 31, 1995.
**Subaccounts EVO and EGG had no activity in the year ended Dec. 31, 1996.
</TABLE>

<PAGE>

American Enterprise Variable Annuity Account -- 
AEL Preferred Variable Annuity Subaccounts


Annual Financial Information

Report of Independent Auditors

The Board of Directors
American Enterprise Life Insurance Company

We have  audited the  individual  and combined  statements  of net assets of the
segregated asset subaccounts of American  Enterprise Variable Annuity Account --
AEL Preferred Variable Annuity  Subaccounts  (comprised of subaccounts EAG, ECR,
EMG, ESI,  EMS,  EDI,  EGI,  ENO, EVO and EGG) as of December 31, 1996,  and the
related  statements of operations for the year then ended, and the statements of
changes in net assets for the year ended  December  31,  1996 and for the period
from February 21, 1995  (commencement of operations) to December 31, 1995. These
financial  statements  are the  responsibility  of the  management  of  American
Enterprise Life Insurance  Company.  Our responsibility is to express an opinion
on these financial statements based on our audits.

We  conducted  our  audits  in  accordance  with  generally   accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements. Our procedures included
confirmation  of securities  owned at December 31, 1996 with the  affiliated and
unaffiliated  mutual  fund  managers.  An  audit  also  includes  assessing  the
accounting principles used and significant estimates made by management, as well
as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.  We believe that our
audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all material  respects,  the individual and combined  financial  position of the
segregated asset subaccounts of American  Enterprise Variable Annuity Account --
AEL  Preferred  Variable  Annuity  Subaccounts  at  December  31,  1996  and the
individual and combined results of their operations and the changes in their net
assets for the periods  described  above, in conformity with generally  accepted
accounting principles.



ERNST & YOUNG LLP
Minneapolis, Minnesota
March 21, 1997


<PAGE>
American Enterprise Life Financial Information

The financial  statements shown below are those of the insurance company and not
those of any other  entity.  They are  included  for the  purpose  of  informing
investors as to the financial condition of the insurance company and its ability
to carry out its obligations under its variable contracts.


                   AMERICAN ENTERPRISE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                                 BALANCE SHEETS

                                                         Dec. 31,      Dec. 31,
 ASSETS                                                    1996          1995
 ------                                                  ---------     ------
                                                              (thousands)
Investments:
Fixed maturities:
Held to maturity, at amortized cost (Fair value:
1996, $1,267,947; 1995, $1,357,977)                     $1,256,143    $1,308,251
Available for sale, at fair value (Amortized cost:
1996, $2,223,457; 1995, $1,546,025)                      2,242,447     1,596,985
                                                        ----------     ---------
                                                         3,498,590     2,905,236

Mortgage loans on real estate                              582,982       393,020
Other investments                                            3,056         4,055
                                                          --------       -------
                                                         4,084,628     3,302,311

Cash and cash equivalents                                   40,829        42,896
Accrued investment income                                   51,571        41,879
Deferred policy acquisition costs                          203,225       170,574
Other assets                                                14,824         4,817
Separate account assets                                     30,760         8,483
                                                           -------    ----------

Total assets                                            $4,425,837    $3,570,960
                                                          ========      ========
LIABILITIES AND STOCKHOLDER'S EQUITY

Liabilities:
Future policy benefits for fixed annuities              $3,881,339    $3,155,651
Policy claims and other policyholders' funds                27,427        11,641
Amounts due to brokers                                      88,731           163
Securities sold under repurchase agreements                     --        67,000
Deferred income taxes                                       18,072        24,177
Other liabilities                                           15,650         7,029
Separate account liabilities                                30,760         8,483
                                                           -------       -------
Total liabilities                                        4,061,979     3,274,144

Stockholder's equity:
Capital stock, $100 par value per share;
100,000 shares authorized,
20,000 shares issued and outstanding                         2,000         2,000
Additional paid-in capital                                 242,872       177,872
Net unrealized gain on investments                          12,343        33,124
Retained earnings                                          106,643        83,820
                                                          --------       -------
Total stockholder's equity                                 363,858       296,816
                                                          --------      --------

Total liabilities and stockholder's equity              $4,425,837    $3,570,960
                                                          ========      ========
Commitments and contingencies (Note 7)

See accompanying notes.

<PAGE>


                   AMERICAN ENTERPRISE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                              STATEMENTS OF INCOME

                                                       Years ended Dec. 31,
                                                    1996       1995      1994
                                                            (thousands)

Revenues:
Net investment income                            $271,719   $223,706   $162,201
Contractholder charges                              5,753      4,214      2,753
Net realized loss on investments                   (5,258)    (1,154)    (1,190)
                                                 --------    -------   --------

Total revenues                                    272,214    226,766    163,764

Benefits and expenses:
Interest credited on investment contracts         191,672    162,662    112,977
Amortization of deferred policy
acquisition costs                                  30,674     20,459     14,052
Other operating expenses                           14,133     10,205      6,523
                                                 --------    -------    -------

Total expenses                                    236,479    193,326    133,552
                                                  -------    -------    -------


Income before income taxes                         35,735     33,440     30,212

Income taxes                                       12,912     11,692     10,574
                                                  -------    -------    -------


Net income                                       $ 22,823   $ 21,748    $19,638
                                                   ======     ======     ======




See accompanying notes.


<PAGE>




                   AMERICAN ENTERPRISE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                            STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS
  
                                                       Years ended Dec. 31,
                                                 1996         1995         1994
                                                           (thousands)
Cash flows from operating activities:
Net income                                   $   22,823   $  21,748   $  19,638
Adjustments to reconcile net income to
net cash provided by (used in) operating 
activities:
Change in accrued investment income              (9,692)     (7,951)     (8,543)
Change in deferred policy acquisition
costs, net                                      (32,651)    (32,926)    (37,642)
Change in other assets                          (10,007)     (4,126)       (512)
Change in policy claims and other
policyholders' funds                             15,786      (4,065)      1,270
Change in deferred income taxes                   5,084        (119)     (3,925)
Change in other liabilities                       8,621       2,698         872
(Accretion of discount)
amortization of premium, net                     (2,091)     (2,321)      1,812
Net realized loss on investments                  5,258       1,154       1,190
Other, net                                         (129)         --          --
                                              ----------   --------  ----------

Net cash provided by (used in)
operating activities                              3,002     (25,908)    (25,840)
                                                -------     -------     -------

Cash flows from investing activities: 
Fixed maturities held to maturity:
Purchases                                       (16,967)   (252,583)   (136,330)
Maturities                                       26,190      25,754      84,514
Sales                                            27,944      33,849       1,469
Fixed maturities available for sale:
Purchases                                      (921,914)   (485,250)   (569,459)
Maturities                                      212,212      85,629      64,116
Sales                                            47,542      57,576      54,755
Other investments:
Purchases                                      (212,182)   (183,892)   (192,488)
Sales                                            19,850       5,543         112
Change in amounts due to brokers                 88,568     (48,709)     21,181
                                               --------  -----------  ---------

Net cash used in
investing activities                          $(728,757)  $(762,083)  $(672,130)
                                              ---------   ---------   ---------

<PAGE>

                   AMERICAN ENTERPRISE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                      STATEMENTS OF CASH FLOWS (continued)

                                                     Years ended Dec. 31,
                                               1996          1995         1994
                                                       (thousands)

Cash flows from financing activities: 
Activity related to investment contracts:
Considerations received                    $  846,378   $  709,127   $  745,053
Surrenders and other benefits                (312,362)    (196,260)    (113,644)
Interest credited to
account balances                              191,672      162,662      112,977
Change in securities sold under
repurchase agreements                         (67,000)      67,000      (30,000)
Capital contribution from parent               65,000       35,000       35,000
                                              -------      -------       ------

Net cash provided by
financing activities                          723,688      777,529      749,386
                                             --------     --------      -------

Net (decrease) increase in cash 
and cash equivalents                           (2,067)     (10,462)      51,416

Cash and cash equivalents 
at beginning of year                           42,896       53,358        1,942
                                            ---------      -------        -----

Cash and cash equivalents 
at end of year                             $   40,829   $   42,896    $  53,358
                                              =======      =======       ======

See accompanying notes.


<PAGE>
                   AMERICAN ENTERPRISE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY
                          NOTES TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
                                  ($ thousands)

1.   Summary of significant accounting policies

     Nature of business

     American  Enterprise  Life Insurance  Company (the Company) is domiciled in
     Indiana and is licensed to transact insurance business in 47 states at Dec.
     31, 1996. The Company's  principal product is deferred  annuities which are
     issued  primarily  to  individuals.  It offers  single  premium  and annual
     premium  deferred  annuities  on both a fixed and  variable  dollar  basis.
     Immediate annuities are offered as well.

     Basis of presentation

     The Company is a wholly owned subsidiary of IDS Life Insurance Company (IDS
     Life),  which is a wholly owned  subsidiary of American  Express  Financial
     Corporation.  American  Express  Financial  Corporation  is a wholly  owned
     subsidiary  of  American  Express  Company.   The  accompanying   financial
     statements  have  been  prepared  in  conformity  with  generally  accepted
     accounting  principles  which  vary  in  certain  respects  from  reporting
     practices  prescribed  or permitted by the Indiana  Department of Insurance
     (see Note 4).

     The  preparation  of financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally
     accepted  accounting  principles  requires management to make estimates and
     assumptions  that affect the reported amounts of assets and liabilities and
     disclosure  of  contingent  assets  and  liabilities  at  the  date  of the
     financial  statements  and the  reported  amounts of revenues  and expenses
     during  the  reporting  period.  Actual  results  could  differ  from those
     estimates.

     Investments

     Fixed  maturities  that the  Company has both the  positive  intent and the
     ability to hold to maturity are  classified as held to maturity and carried
     at amortized  cost. All other fixed  maturities  and all marketable  equity
     securities  are classified as available for sale and carried at fair value.
     Unrealized gains and losses on securities  classified as available for sale
     are  carried  as a  separate  component  of  stockholder's  equity,  net of
     deferred taxes.

     Realized investment gain or loss is determined on an identified cost basis.

     Prepayments  are  anticipated  on certain  investments  in  mortgage-backed
     securities in determining  the constant  effective  yield used to recognize
     interest  income.  Prepayment  estimates are based on information  received
     from brokers who deal in mortgage-backed securities.

     Mortgage  loans on real estate are carried at amortized  cost less reserves
     for mortgage loan losses. The estimated fair value of the mortgage loans is
     determined by a discounted cash flow analysis using mortgage interest rates
     currently offered for mortgages of similar maturities.

     Impairment  of  mortgage  loans is  measured  as the  excess of the  loan's
     recorded  investment  over its  present  value of  expected  principal  and
     interest payments  discounted at the loan's effective interest rate, or the
     fair value of  collateral.  The amount of the  impairment  is recorded in a
     reserve for mortgage loan losses.  The reserve for mortgage loans losses is
     maintained  at a level  that  management  believes  is  adequate  to absorb
     estimated  losses in the  portfolio.  The level of the  reserve  account is
     determined  based on  several  factors,  including  historical  experience,
     expected  future  principal  and interest  payments,  estimated  collateral
     values,  and current and  anticipated  economic and  political  conditions.
     Management  regularly  evaluates  the  adequacy of the reserve for mortgage
     loan losses.

     The Company  generally stops accruing  interest on mortgage loans for which
     interest  payments  are  delinquent  more  than  three  months.   Based  on
     management's  judgement as to the  ultimate  collectibility  of  principal,
     interest  payments  received are either  recognized as income or applied to
     the recorded investment in the loan.

     The cost of interest rate caps is amortized to  investment  income over the
     life of the contracts and payments received as a result of these agreements
     are recorded as investment  income when  realized.  The  amortized  cost of
     interest rate caps is included in other investments.

     When evidence  indicates a decline,  which is other than temporary,  in the
     underlying  value  or  earning  power  of  individual   investments,   such
     investments are written down to the fair value by a charge to income.

     Statements of cash flows

     The  Company  considers  investments  with a maturity  at the date of their
     acquisition  of  three  months  or  less  to  be  cash  equivalents.  These
     securities are carried  principally  at amortized  cost which  approximates
     fair value.

     Supplementary  information to the statements of cash flows is summarized as
     follows:

                                      1996             1995            1994
                                     ------           ------          -----
     Cash paid during the year for:
       Income taxes                  $10,317          $11,389         $14,750
       Interest on borrowings            998              979             669

     Recognition of profits on fixed annuity contracts

     Profits on fixed deferred  annuities are recognized by the Company over the
     lives of the  contracts,  using  primarily  the  interest  method.  Profits
     represent  the  excess of  investment  income  earned  from  investment  of
     contract considerations over interest credited to contract owners and other
     expenses.

     Deferred policy acquisition costs

     The costs of acquiring new business, principally sales compensation, policy
     issue costs,  and certain  sales  expenses,  have been  deferred on annuity
     contracts.  These  costs are  amortized  in relation  to  surrender  charge
     revenue  and a portion  of the  excess of  investment  income  earned  from
     investment  of the contract  considerations  over the interest  credited to
     contract owners.

     Liabilities for future policy benefits

     Liabilities for single premium deferred annuities and installment annuities
     are  accumulation  values.  Liabilities  for fixed  annuities  in a benefit
     status are based on the 1983a Table with  various  interest  rates  ranging
     from 5.5 percent to 8.75 percent, depending on year of issue.

     Federal income taxes

     The Company's taxable income is included in the consolidated federal income
     tax return of American  Express  Company.  The Company  provides for income
     taxes on a separate return basis,  except that, under an agreement  between
     American Express  Financial  Corporation and American Express Company,  tax
     benefit is  recognized  for  losses to the  extent  they can be used on the
     consolidated  tax return.  It is the policy of American  Express  Financial
     Corporation  and  its   subsidiaries   that  American   Express   Financial
     Corporation will reimburse subsidiaries for all tax benefits.

     Included  in  other  liabilities  at Dec.  31,  1996  and 1995 are $787 and
     ($1,813),  respectively  receivable  from/(payable to) IDS Life for federal
     income taxes.

     Separate account business

     The separate  account assets and  liabilities  represent funds held for the
     exclusive  benefit of the variable  annuity  contract  owners.  The Company
     receives mortality and expense risk fees from the variable annuity separate
     accounts.

     The Company makes contractual  mortality assurances to the variable annuity
     contract  owners that the net assets of the separate  accounts  will not be
     affected by future  variations in the actual life expectancy  experience of
     the  annuitants  and  the  beneficiaries  from  the  mortality  assumptions
     implicit  in  the  annuity  contracts.  The  Company  makes  periodic  fund
     transfers to, or withdrawals from, the separate accounts for such actuarial
     adjustments for variable annuities that are in the benefit payment period.

     Accounting changes

     The Financial  Accounting Standards Board's (FASB) ) Statement of Financial
     Accounting  Standards No. 121, "Accounting for the Impairment of Long-Lived
     Assets and for Long-Lived  Assets to Be Disposed Of," was effective Jan. 1,
     1996. The new rule did not have a material impact on the Company's  results
     of operations or financial condition.
     
     Reclassification

     Certain 1995 and 1994 amounts have been reclassified to conform to the 1996
     presentation.

2.   Investments

     Fair values of  investments  in fixed  maturities  represent  quoted market
     prices and estimated values when quoted prices are not available. Estimated
     values are  determined by  established  procedures  involving,  among other
     things,  review of market  indices,  price  levels of current  offerings of
     comparable issues, price estimates and market data from independent brokers
     and financial files.

     Net  realized  gain  (loss) on  investments  for the years ended Dec. 31 is
     summarized as follows:

                               1996              1995             1994
                              -------          -------          ------
     Fixed maturities        $(2,888)          $(1,114)         $(1,198)
      Mortgage loans          (2,370)               --               --
      Other investments           --               (40)               8
                                 ---               ----       ---------
                             $(5,258)          $(1,154)         $(1,190)
                             =======           =======          =======

     Changes in net unrealized  appreciation  (depreciation)  of investments for
     the years ended Dec. 31 are summarized as follows:
                                                         
                                     1996             1995            1994
                                  ----------       ----------      -------
     Fixed maturities:
       Held to maturity            $(37,922)        $139,815       $(132,842)
       Available for sale           (31,970)         118,134         (88,775)


     The amortized  cost,  gross  unrealized  gains and losses and fair value of
     investments in fixed maturities at Dec. 31, 1996 are as follows:
    
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                   Gross              Gross
                                                  Amortized      Unrealized        Unrealized           Fair
     Held to maturity                                 Cost          Gains             Losses            Value
     ----------------                            ----------       --------          --------        ---------
     <S>                                          <C>             <C>            <C>               <C>        
     U.S. Government agency obligations           $  13,536       $    415       $        --       $    13,951
     State and municipal obligations                  3,003            125                --             3,128
     Corporate bonds and obligations              1,030,649         28,013            11,022         1,047,640
     Mortgage-backed securities                     208,955          1,076             6,803           203,228
                                                -----------       --------          --------       -----------
                                                 $1,256,143        $29,629           $17,825        $1,267,947
                                                 ==========        =======           =======        ==========

     Available for sale
     U.S. Government agency obligations       $       1,666    $        --        $       63     $       1,603
     Corporate bonds and obligations                942,698         20,678             6,486           956,889
     Mortgage-backed securities                   1,279,093         16,047            11,185         1,283,955
                                                 ----------        -------          --------        ----------
      Total fixed maturities                     $2,223,457        $36,725           $17,734        $2,242,447
                                                 ==========        =======           =======        ==========
</TABLE>

     The change in net unrealized loss on available for sale securities included
     as a separate component of stockholder's equity, net of deferred taxes, was
     $20,781 in 1996.
<PAGE>
     The amortized  cost,  gross  unrealized  gains and losses and fair value of
     investments in fixed maturities and equity  securities at Dec. 31, 1995 are
     as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                                   Gross              Gross
                                                  Amortized      Unrealized        Unrealized           Fair
     Held to maturity                                 Cost          Gains             Losses            Value
     ----------------                            ----------       --------          --------        ---------
     <S>                                          <C>             <C>              <C>             <C>        
     U.S. Government agency obligations           $  16,050       $    570         $      --       $    16,620
     State and municipal obligations                  3,004            110                --             3,114
     Corporate bonds and obligations              1,068,971         53,544             5,427         1,117,088
     Mortgage-backed securities                     220,226          2,460             1,531           221,155
                                                -----------       --------            ------       -----------
                                                 $1,308,251        $56,684            $6,958        $1,357,977
                                                 ==========        =======            ======        ==========

     Available for sale
     U.S. Government agency obligations       $         543      $      14          $     --      $        557
     State and municipal obligations                    999             25                --             1,024
     Corporate bonds and obligations                520,978         26,751               436           547,293
     Mortgage-backed securities                   1,023,505         26,731             2,125         1,048,111
                                                 ----------        -------             -----        ----------
     Total fixed maturities                       1,546,025         53,521             2,561         1,596,985
     Equity securities                                    3             --                --                 3
                                            ---------------          -----         ---------   ---------------
                                                 $1,546,028        $53,521            $2,561        $1,596,988
                                                 ==========        =======            ======        ==========
</TABLE>

     The change in net unrealized gain on available for sale securities included
     as a separate component of stockholder's equity, net of deferred taxes, was
     $76,813 in 1995.

     The amortized  cost and fair value of  investments  in fixed  maturities at
     Dec. 31, 1996 by contractual maturity are shown below.  Expected maturities
     will differ from  contractual  maturities  because  borrowers  may have the
     right to call or prepay  obligations  with or  without  call or  prepayment
     penalties.

                                              Amortized                  Fair
     Held to maturity                             Cost                   Value

     Due in one year or less               $      3,446            $      3,432
     Due from one to five years                 203,377                 211,070
     Due from five to ten years                 677,378                 689,663
     Due in more than ten years                 162,987                 160,555
     Mortgage-backed securities                 208,955                 203,227
                                            -----------             -----------
                                             $1,256,143              $1,267,947
                                             ==========              ==========

                                              Amortized                  Fair
     Available for sale                           Cost                   Value

     Due in one year or less                $    78,990             $    79,668
     Due from one to five years                 102,420                 105,584
     Due from five to ten years                 618,645                 627,245
     Due in more than ten years                 144,309                 145,995
     Mortgage-backed securities               1,279,093               1,283,955
                                            -----------             -----------

                                             $2,223,457              $2,242,447
                                             ==========              ==========

     During the years  ended Dec.  31,  1996,  1995 and 1994,  fixed  maturities
     classified  as held to maturity were sold with  amortized  cost of $27,969,
     $34,809 and $1,747, respectively.  Net gains and losses on these sales were
     not significant.  The sale of these fixed maturities was due to significant
     deterioration in the issuers' creditworthiness.
<PAGE>
     In addition, fixed maturities available for sale were sold during 1996 with
     proceeds of $47,542 and gross realized gains and losses of $17 and  $3,139,
     respectively.  Fixed  maturities  available  for sale were sold during 1995
     with  proceeds of $57,576 and gross  realized  gains and losses of $nil and
     $646,  respectively.  Fixed maturities  available for sale were sold during
     1994 with proceeds of $54,755 and gross  realized  gains and losses of $112
     and $1,059, respectively.

     At Dec. 31, 1996, bonds carried at $2,897 were on deposit with various 
     states as required by law.

     Net investment income for the years ended Dec. 31 is summarized as follows:


                                              1996          1995          1994
                                              -------      --------      -----
     Interest on fixed maturities           $230,559       $198,829     $151,599
     Interest on mortgage loans               41,010         24,969        9,202
     Interest on cash equivalents              1,402            829        1,452
     Other                                     1,194            921          824
                                          ----------            ---       ------
                                             274,165        225,548      163,077
            Less investment expenses           2,446          1,842          876
                                          ----------         ------       ------
                                            $271,719       $223,706     $162,201
                                            ========       ========     ========

     Securities  are rated by Moody's and  Standard & Poor's  (S&P),  except for
     securities  carried  at  approximately  $349  million  which  are  rated by
     American Express  Financial  Corporation  internal  analysts using criteria
     similar to Moody's and S&P. A summary of investments  in fixed  maturities,
     at amortized cost, by rating on Dec. 31 is as follows:

            Rating                       1996                  1995
     ----------------------           -----------           ----------
     Aaa/AAA                           $1,489,460           $1,246,755
     Aa/AA                                 32,903               39,055
     Aa/A                                  38,577               18,076
     A/A                                  445,201              435,957
     A/BBB                                204,402              148,713
     Baa/BBB                              818,545              671,896
     Baa/BB                                97,783               81,821
     Below investment grade               352,729              212,003
                                      -----------          -----------
                                       $3,479,600           $2,854,276
                                       ==========           ==========

     At Dec. 31, 1996,  approximately 93 percent of the securities rated Aaa/AAA
     are GNMA,  FNMA and FHLMC  mortgage-backed  securities.  No holdings of any
     other  issuer  are  greater  than  one  percent  of  the  Company's   total
     investments in fixed maturities.

     At Dec. 31, 1996,  approximately  14.3  percent of the  Company's  invested
     assets were mortgage  loans on real estate.  Summaries of mortgage loans by
     region of the United States and by type of real estate are as follows:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                             Dec. 31, 1996                           Dec. 31, 1995
                                          -------------------                      ----------------
                                     On Balance       Commitments             On Balance         Commitments
          Region                    Sheet            to Purchase              Sheet             to Purchase
     ------------------           ----------         -----------             ---------          -----------
     <S>                            <C>                <C>                   <C>                 <C>    
     South Atlantic                 $139,630           $22,525               $  82,442           $25,781
     Middle Atlantic                 111,257             6,257                  73,958            20,790
     East North Central              105,666             7,508                  81,456             7,485
     Mountain                         82,389             4,380                  62,275               832
     West North Central               54,728            15,017                  34,819             9,980
     New England                      50,584                --                  30,481            13,306
     Pacific                          18,504             1,877                  15,992             4,158
     West South Central               14,927             5,006                   6,649               832
     East South Central                7,667                --                   4,948                --
                                   ---------      ------------              ----------       -----------
                                     585,352            62,570                 393,020            83,164
     Less allowance for losses         2,370                --                      --                --
                                  ----------      ------------             -----------          --------
                                    $582,982           $62,570                $393,020           $83,164
                                    ========           =======                ========           =======
<PAGE>


                                          Dec. 31, 1996                              Dec. 31, 1995
                                         ---------------                            --------------
                                   On Balance        Commitments             On Balance     Commitments
          Property type             Sheet           to Purchase                Sheet           to Purchase
     -----------------------       ---------        -----------               --------         -----------
     Department/retail stores       $184,192           $26,905                $138,378           $34,097
     Apartments                      172,208             2,816                 130,601            14,554
     Office buildings                112,430            14,391                  59,601             9,980
     Industrial buildings             54,117             2,816                  31,259             9,148
     Hotels/Motels                    28,189             6,257                   3,266            10,811
     Medical buildings                18,787             7,508                  16,408             2,495
     Nursing/retirement homes          8,080             1,877                   8,190             1,663
     Mixed Use                         7,349                --                   5,317                --
     Other                                --                --                        --             416
                                  ----------       -----------               -----------       ---------
                                     585,352            62,570                 393,020            83,164
     Less allowance for losses         2,370                --                      --                --
                                  ----------       -----------               ---------        ----------
                                    $582,982           $62,570                $393,020           $83,164
                                    ========           =======                ========           =======
</TABLE>

     Mortgage  loan  fundings  are  restricted  by  state  insurance  regulatory
     authorities to 80 percent or less of the market value of the real estate at
     the time of  origination  of the  loan.  The  Company  holds  the  mortgage
     document,  which gives the right to take  possession of the property if the
     borrower fails to perform according to the terms of the agreement. The fair
     value of the  mortgage  loans  is  determined  by a  discounted  cash  flow
     analysis using mortgage  interest rates currently  offered for mortgages of
     similar  maturities.  Commitments  to  purchase  mortgages  are made in the
     ordinary course of business.  The fair value of the mortgage commitments is
     $nil.

     At Dec. 31, 1996, the Company's  recorded  investment in impaired loans was
     $5,515  with a reserve  of $870.  During  the year,  the  average  recorded
     investment in impaired loans was $3,577.

     There were no impaired loans prior to 1996.

     The following table presents  changes in the reserve for investment  losses
     related to all loans:

                                                                  1996
     Balance, Jan. 1                                           $      0
     Provision for investment losses                              2,370
                                                                -------
     Balance, Dec. 31                                            $2,370
                                                                 ======

     There was no reserve prior to 1996.

3.   Income taxes

     The Company  qualifies as a life  insurance  company for federal income tax
     purposes.  As such,  the Company is subject to the  Internal  Revenue  Code
     provisions applicable to life insurance companies.

     The income tax expense consists of the following:

                                        1996            1995           1994
                                      --------         -------        -----
     Federal income taxes:
       Current                          $7,124        $11,753        $14,454
       Deferred                          5,084           (119)        (3,925)
                                         -----        --------       --------
                                        12,208         11,634         10,529

     State income taxes-current            704             58             45
                                           ---            ---          -----
     Income tax expense                $12,912        $11,692        $10,574
                                       =======        =======        =======
<PAGE>
     Increases  (decreases)  to the federal  income tax provision  applicable to
     pretax income based on the statutory rate are attributable to:

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                  1996                    1995                      1994
                                          --------------------     ------------------       ------------------
                                           Provision      Rate     Provision     Rate       Provision     Rate
     <S>                                    <C>         <C>          <C>         <C>         <C>         <C>  
     Federal income taxes based
       on the statutory rate                $12,507     35.0%        $11,704     35.0%       $10,574     35.0%
     Increases (decreases) are 
     attributable to :
         Tax-excluded interest                  (53)    (0.1)            (69)    (0.3)           (81)    (0.3)
         Other, net                            (246)    (0.7)             (1)     0.1             36      0.1
                                               ----     ----            -----     ---             --     ----
     Federal income taxes                   $12,208     34.2%        $11,634     34.8%       $10,529     34.8%
</TABLE>
     
     Significant components of the Company's deferred tax assets and liabilities
     as of Dec. 31 are as follows:

     Deferred tax assets:                           1996             1995
                                                   -------          -----
     Policy reserves                              $48,321          $45,482
     Other                                          1,851            2,036
                                                   -------          ------
          Total deferred tax assets                50,172           47,518
                                                   ------           ------

     Deferred tax liabilities:
     Deferred policy acquisition costs             59,162           50,350
     Investments                                    9,082           21,345
                                                  -------          -------
          Total deferred tax liabilities           68,244           71,695
                                                  -------         --------
          Net deferred tax liabilities           $(18,072)        $(24,177)
                                                 ========         ========

     The Company is required to establish a valuation  allowance for any portion
     of the deferred tax assets that  management  believes will not be realized.
     In the opinion of  management,  it is more likely than not that the Company
     will realize the benefit of the deferred tax assets and, therefore, no such
     valuation allowance has been established.

4.   Stockholder's equity

     Retained earnings available for distribution as dividends to the parent are
     limited  to  the  Company's   surplus  as  determined  in  accordance  with
     accounting practices prescribed by state insurance regulatory  authorities.
     Statutory  unassigned  surplus  aggregated $6,103 and $7,553 as of Dec. 31,
     1996 and 1995, respectively.

     Statutory net income and stockholder's equity as of Dec. 31, are 
     summarized as follows:

                                             1996           1995           1994
                                            ------         ------        -------
     Statutory net income                $   9,138      $  15,499      $   8,131
     Statutory stockholder's equity        250,975        187,425        148,037

5.   Related party transactions

     Charges  by IDS  Life  for  use of  joint  facilities  and  other  services
     aggregated   $17,936,   $10,380  and  $5,581  for  1996,   1995  and  1994,
     respectively.  Certain  of these  costs are  included  in  deferred  policy
     acquisition costs.

6.   Lines of credit

     The  Company  has  available  lines of credit  with two banks and  American
     Express Financial  Corporation (AEFC) aggregating $80,000, of which $50,000
     is with AEFC.  The lines of credit are at 45 to 80 basis  points  over each
     lender's cost of funds. The $10,000 line of credit with one bank expired on
     Dec.  31, 1996 and the Company did not seek  renewal.  The $20,000  line of
     credit with the other bank expires on June 30, 1997 and the Company expects
     to  seek  renewal.   There  were  no  borrowings  outstanding  under  these
     agreements at Dec. 31, 1996 or 1995.

7.   Commitments and contingencies

     The  economy  and other  factors  have  caused an increase in the number of
     insurance   companies   that  are  under   regulatory   supervision.   This
     circumstance  has resulted in  substantial  assessments  by state  guaranty
     associations to cover losses to policyholders of insolvent or rehabilitated
     companies.  The Company expects  additional future  assessments  related to
     past insolvencies and rehabilitations.  Management has estimated the impact
     of future  assessments on the Company's  financial  position and recorded a
     reserve for such future assessments.

8.   Derivative financial instruments

     The  Company  enters  into  transactions   involving  derivative  financial
     instruments to manage its exposure to interest rate risk, including hedging
     specific transactions. The Company does not hold derivative instruments for
     trading   purposes.   The  Company  manages  risks  associated  with  these
     instruments as described below.

     Market risk is the possibility  that the value of the derivative  financial
     instruments  will  change due to  fluctuations  in a factor  from which the
     instrument  derives its value,  primarily an interest  rate. The Company is
     not impacted by market risk  related to  derivatives  held for  non-trading
     purposes beyond that inherent in cash market transactions. Derivatives held
     for  purposes  other than  trading  are  largely  used to manage  risk and,
     therefore,  the cash flow and income effects of the derivatives are inverse
     to the effects of the underlying transactions.

     Credit risk is the possibility that the  counterparty  will not fulfill the
     terms of the contract.  The Company  monitors  credit  exposure  related to
     derivative  financial  instruments through established approval procedures,
     including setting  concentration  limits by counterparty and industry,  and
     requiring collateral,  where appropriate.  A vast majority of the Company's
     counterparties are rated A or better by Moody's and Standard & Poor's.

     Credit  exposure  related to interest rate caps is measured by  replacement
     cost of the contracts.  The  replacement  cost represents the fair value of
     the instruments.

     The notional or contract  amount of a derivative  financial  instrument  is
     generally  used to calculate  the cash flows that are received or paid over
     the life of the agreement. Notional amounts are not recorded on the balance
     sheet. Notional amounts far exceed the related credit exposure.

     The Company's holdings of derivative financial instruments are as follows:

                              Notional      Carrying       Fair     Total Credit
     Dec. 31, 1996             Amount        Value         Value      Exposure
       Assets:
         Interest rate caps   $400,000      $3,056        $1,621       $1,621
                              ========      ======        ======       ======

     The fair values of  derivative  financial  instruments  are based on market
     values,  dealer quotes or pricing models.  All interest rate caps expire in
     the year 2000.

     Interest  rate caps are used to manage the  Company's  exposure to interest
     rate risk.  These  instruments  are used  primarily  to protect  the margin
     between  interest  rates  earned  on  investments  and the  interest  rates
     credited to related annuity contract holders.

9.   Fair values of financial instruments

     The Company  discloses fair value  information for most on- and off-balance
     sheet  financial  instruments  for which it is practicable to estimate that
     value.  Fair  value  of life  insurance  obligations,  receivables  and all
     non-financial instruments, such as deferred acquisition costs are excluded.
     Off-balance sheet intangible assets are also excluded.  Management believes
     the value of excluded assets and liabilities is significant. The fair value
     of the Company,  therefore, cannot be  estimated by aggregating the amounts
     presented.
<PAGE>
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>

                                                            1996                                1995
                                                          ---------                           ---------
                                                    Carrying        Fair               Carrying          Fair
      Financial Assets                                Value          Value                Value           Value
      <S>                                         <C>           <C>                   <C>             <C>       
      Investments:
      Fixed maturities (Note 2):
      Held to maturity                            $1,256,143    $1,267,947            $1,308,251      $1,357,977
      Available for sale                           2,242,447     2,242,447             1,596,985       1,596,985
      Mortgage loans on real estate
        (Note 2)                                     582,982       597,053               393,020         419,557
      Equity securities (Note 2)                          --            --                     3               3
      Derivative financial instruments
        (Note 8)                                       3,056         1,621                 4,052           1,574
      Cash and cash equivalents (Note 1)              40,829        40,829                42,896          42,896
      Separate account assets (Note 1)                30,760        30,760                 8,483           8,483

      Financial Liabilities
      Future policy benefits for fixed
        annuities                                  3,871,682     3,702,141             3,149,087       2,997,716
      Separate account liabilities                    30,760        28,990                 8,483           8,075
</TABLE>

     At Dec.  31, 1996 and 1995,  the  carrying  amount and fair value of future
     policy  benefits  for  fixed  annuities   exclude  life   insurance-related
     contracts  carried at $9,657 and  $6,564,  respectively.  The fair value of
     these benefits is based on the status of the annuities at Dec. 31, 1996 and
     1995.  The fair value of deferred  annuities  is  estimated as the carrying
     amount less applicable  surrender charges.  The fair value for annuities in
     non-life  contingent  payout  status is estimated  as the present  value of
     projected  benefit  payments at rates  appropriate for contracts  issued in
     1996 and 1995.

<PAGE>
Report of Independent Auditors

The Board of Directors
American Enterprise Life Insurance Company


We have audited the  accompanying  balance  sheets of American  Enterprise  Life
Insurance  Company (a wholly owned subsidiary of IDS Life Insurance  Company) as
of December  31, 1996 and 1995,  and the related  statements  of income and cash
flows for each of the three years in the period ended  December 31, 1996.  These
financial  statements are the  responsibility of the Company's  management.  Our
responsibility  is to express an opinion on these financial  statements based on
our audits.

We  conducted  our  audits  in  accordance  with  generally   accepted  auditing
standards.  Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the financial statements are free of material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the amounts and disclosures in the financial statements.  An audit also includes
assessing the  accounting  principles  used and  significant  estimates  made by
management,  as well as evaluating the overall financial statement presentation.
We believe that our audits provide a reasonable basis for our opinion.

In our opinion,  the financial  statements  referred to above present fairly, in
all  material  respects,  the  financial  position of American  Enterprise  Life
Insurance  Company  at  December  31,  1996 and  1995,  and the  results  of its
operations  and its cash flows for each of the three  years in the period  ended
December 31, 1996, in conformity with generally accepted accounting principles.



Ernst & Young LLP
February 7, 1997
Minneapolis, Minnesota



<PAGE>


PAGE 43
STATEMENT OF DIFFERENCES

Difference                           Description

1)  The layout is different          1)  Some of the layout in the
    throughout the prospectus.           prospectus to shareholders
                                         is in two columns.

2)  Headings.                        2)  The headings in the
                                         prospectus are placed
                                         in blue strip at the top
                                         of the page.

3)  There are pictures, icons        3)  Each picture, icon and
    and graphs throughout the            graph is described in
    prospectus.                          a heading.

4)  Footnotes for charts and         4)  The footnotes for each
    graphs are described at              chart or graph are typed
    the left margin.                     below the description of
                                         the chart or graph.

5)  The page numbers in the          5)  The prospectus begins on
    electronic document do not           page 1 in both documents,
    correspond to the prospectus         ends on page 34 in the
    sent to the shareholders.            electronic document, and
                                         page 43 in the prospectus
                                         sent to the shareholders.

6)  Prospectus Information.          6)  Changed order of the
                                         Putnam funds on pages 16
                                         and 17.  Made minor
                                         stylistic changes to
                                         Putnam VT New
                                         Opportunities Fund and
                                         Putnam VT Voyager Fund
                                         descriptions due to
                                         reordering.



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