The metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) absorption and emission properties of several ruthenium(II)-bipyridine am(m)ine complexes are compared. The Gaussian deconvolution of the spectra indicates that: (a) the emission MLCT bandwidths are smaller than the absorption bandwidths for the first components of the apparent vibronic progressions; (b) the emission bands decrease in energy and width when a polypyridyl is replaced by an am(m)ine. The observations can be interpreted in terms of a two state model and the perturbation theory-based treatment of the attenuation of the effetive reorganizational energy, lambda(r) congruent to lambda(r)(O)(1 - 4alpha(DA)(2)), where lambda(r)(O) is the reorganizational energy the effective reorganizational energy corresponding to no mixing between the two electron transfer states and alpha(DA) = (H-DA/E-DA) is the mixing coefficient. Both the solvent and molecular contributions to lambda(r) are attenuated. The MLCT excited state lifetimes also decrease with am(m)ine substitution, and the non-radiative decay rate constant at 77 K is roughly proportional to the number of am(m)ine moieties coordinated to the ruthenium center.