Saturated hydraulic conductivity (K s ) is needed for the design of groundwater recharge, irrigation systems, subsurface drainage systems, and ground water abstraction structures. Infiltrometer and inverse auger hole methods (IAHM) are used for measuring in situ surface and subsurface K s of soil. IAHM with various bottom geometries recently became available for field application. Bottom flow geometries of augers depend on the shape of the auger bit and soil types. In medium textured soil with medium size auger bit creates a hemispherical cavity while in heavy textured stable soil with a long auger bit conical cavity is formed. The conical frustum at the bottom is formed with a long conical auger bit in medium textured soil. In light textured soil, an equivalent cylindrical bottom is expected. IAH methods with flat, hemispherical, conical, frustum cone, and equivalent cylindrical bottom geometries were applied for the measurement of K s in recently tilled sodic soil and compared with the K s value obtained by the infiltrometer. The K s obtained by the infiltrometer, IAH with flat, hemispherical, conical, equivalent cylindrical, and frustum cone geometries were 1.75, 2.87, 3.06, 2.77, 3.03 and 3.58 cm day -1 , respectively. Percent deviations of K s ranged from 3.30 to 38.95% for the infiltrometer and IAH with different bottom geometries when compared with IAH with a flat bottom. In extremely dispersed sodic conditions either of the methods could be applied for in situ measurement of K s without giving much different value. The model with suitable bottom geometry based on sound hypothesis should be used for K s measurement.