Electric field driven ion transport in ion exchange membranes, often quantified by membrane resistance or ionic conductivity, is important for membrane-based technologies such as electrodialysis, batteries, fuel cells, etc. Various methods for measuring membrane ionic conductivity have been reported in the literature, but no widely accepted, standard protocol exists. Consequently, conflicting ionic conductivity results for widely studied commercial ion exchange membranes have been reported, leading to confusion regarding, for example, the salt concentration dependence of membrane ionic conductivity, especially for membranes equilibrated with dilute aqueous salt solutions. In this study, we report a simple, fast, reliable technique for measuring ionic conductivity based on direct contact between the membrane and electrodes. The technique was used to measure ionic conductivity values for a series of commercial ion exchange membranes as a function of external solution NaCl concentration (ranging from 0.001 to 5M). The salt concentration dependence of membrane ionic conductivity was rationalized within the Nernst-Einstein framework. At low external solution salt concentrations (< 0.3M), ionic conductivity values were essentially constant since mobile ion concentrations in the membranes approached a constant value (i.e., the fixed charge group concentration). At high salt concentrations (> 0.3M), ionic conductivity values increased with increasing salt concentration for three of the membranes, presumably due to increased ion sorption owing to weaker Donnan exclusion, and decreased for one membrane, presumably due to decreased ion diffusion coefficients resulting from osmotic deswelling.