Diffusion time lags, steady state permeabilities and sorption/desorption kinetics are reported for water vapor in biaxially oriented, solvent cast polyacrylonitrile (PAN) films. A wide range of vapor activities was studied at 15°C, 30°C, and 45°C. The transient and steady state permeation behavior at low and intermediate upstream vapor activities suggests that Fickian transport occurs under most of the conditions studied. Specifically, time lags predicted by Fick's law using the concentration-dependent diffusion coefficient derived from steady state permeation measurements agree reasonably well with experimentally measured values in most cases. p]Integral sorption/desorption kinetics at low and intermediate vapor activities also appear to be Fickian with a concentration-dependent diffusion coefficient. The form of the concentration dependency, evaluated from the “long time” solution of the diffusion equation for sorption experiments, is consistent with the form established for the diffusion coefficient from the steady-state permeation data. The diffusion coefficient exhibits a maximum near the concentration at which clustering is initiated. Presumably, the effective diffusion coefficient of water increases initially due to plasticizing or dual mode sorption effects associated with gap filling in the glassy matrix. As clustering becomes significant, the effective mobility of water is substantially reduced; therefore, the diffusion coefficient decreases at higher activities as clustering becomes the dominant mode of sorption. p]A tendency of the “early time” sorption/desorption kinetic data to exhibit concavity to the square root time axis at high activities suggests that time-dependent reductions in the diffusion coefficient may be occurring. Such reductions could be related to the kinetics of cluster formation at the higher vapor activities during sorption and to slow polymer consolidation during desorption. Any such non-Fickian effects, related to chain segment relaxations occurring over time scales similar to those of a diffusional jump, appear to be of importance only at short times. The short time nature of any such processes is suggested by the fact that diffusion coefficients evaluated from the “long time” solution to the diffusion equation for sorption are consistent with coefficients evaluated from steady state permeation data, in which case all time-dependent relaxation phenomena should be absent.