The main goal of this paper is a laboratory method development for determining the capillary pressure and relative permeability from coreflooding test specifically for mixed-wet rocks. Previously, the steady-state transient test (SSTT) was designed to determine both relative permeability (Kr) and capillary pressure (Pc) from a single steady-state coreflood by using the transient data of routine steady-state tests. On the contrary to the previous works, where SSTT was developed for completely hydrophobic or hydrophilic outcrop cores, this paper determines Kr and Pc for mixed-wet cores. Depending on the capillary pressure equation applied, the mathematical model for two-phase flow in mixed-wet rocks contains one or two extra constants, so some extra measurements must be taken during SSTT, to determine Pc and Kr curves. We change the experimental protocol by establishing a uniform initial saturation Swi by evaporation method. We also include bump floods at two high rates for the alternative determination of saturation and relative permeability for residual oil. A new inverse solver determines the set of model constants that employs van Genuchten's Pc formula and a vaporization procedure for initial core saturation. The number of resulting model coefficients is equal to seven and matches the dimension of the measured data array for mixed-wet cores.The developed SSTT for mixed-wet rocks is applied and validated for both high-salinity (HS) and low-salinity (LS) waterfloods. Strong agreement between laboratory steady-state, transient, and bump-flood data and those obtained by mathematical modelling – R2 is above 0.99 for steady-state data and above 0.9 for transient data - validates the proposed SSTT procedure and inverse solver for mixed-wet cores and HS and LS waterfloods. Our findings indicate that low salinity has a greater effect in expanding the range of positive capillary pressure compared to high salinity. This suggests an increase in water-wettability as the salinity decreases.