It is of great significance to identify new oxidation state of actinide, which will enrich actinide coordination chemistry and advance its exploration of chemical bond and reactivity. So far, uranium with +3~+6 oxidation states has been widely recognized in complexes. Comparatively, isolated, crystallographically identified U(II) complexes remain rare. Inspired by the pioneering work of Evans and co-workers that Y•[U II (Cp') 3 ] (Y=[K(2.2.2-cryptand)] + , Cp'=[C 5 H 4 SiMe 3 ]-) was structurally characterized, several uranium(II) complexes such as Y•[UL E ] (L E =[(Ad,Me ArO) 3 mesitylene] 3-, Ad= adamantyl), [U(NHAr iPr6) 2 ] (Ar iPr6 =2,6-(2,4,6-i Pr 3 C 6 H 2) 2 C 6 H 3), Y•[U{N(SiMe 3) 2 } 3 ] and [U(η 5-C 5 i Pr 5) 2 ] were synthetically accessible. Inspection finds that all these U(II) complexes were prepared in the same route, i.e., utilizing potassium graphite or potassium sphere to reduce respective U(III) parent at low temperature. Cyclopentadiene (Cp) and arene (Ar)-based ligands are involved. They are key to determine U(II) electron configuration, leading to 5f 3 6d 1 and 5f 4 , respectively. Moreover, δ(U-Ar) bonds play a significant role in stabilizing arene-ligated complexes. With the supporting of Cp-derived ligands, actinide(II) complexes were extended to Th, Np and Pu. Unfortunately, it is not the case for the arene ligands, even with massive efforts. Given the prevailing route that actinide(II) complex was synthesized by reducing its trivalent parent, the exploration of redox property will help to guide the synthesis of more novel U(II) and even other actinide(II) complexes. In this respect, theoretical computation based on accurate methodology is greatly appealing. Herein, relativistic density functional theory was exploited to investigate structural and redox properties of [AnL] z (An=Ac~Pu; L=[(Me,Me ArOH) 3 Ar] 3-; z=0 and-1), where analogues of uranium complexes were experimentally known. It is found that the central arene moiety is redox-active for Ac and Th complexes in the reduction reaction, while the metal center is reduced for other complexes. So Ac and Th in reduced products still remain +3 oxidation states, whereas metals in others turn +2. The 5f n electronic configuration is unraveled for actinide of [AnL]-(An=Pa~Pu), having 3~6 electrons, respectively. Calculated redox potential (E 0) increases from Ac to Pu in general, where U and Np show lower values than adjacent elements. A good correlation has been built between E 0 and Δ(An-C Ar /An-Ar cent)/electron affinity. In brief, the study is expected to provide theoretical support for the synthesis of novel arene-based actinide(II) complexes. Keywords δ(An-Ar)-type low-valent actinide complexes; tris(aryloxide)arene; electronic structure; redox reaction; relativistic density functional theory