Viscoelasticity, induced by the entanglement of wormlike or threadlike micelles, has been observed in various surfactant systems and drawn considerable interest in both fundamental and applied science owing to the systems' special rheological properties. 1À6 The rheology of these viscoelastic surfactant fluids is similar to that of the solutions of flexible polymers. 7 However, unlike covalent chemical bonding polymers, self-assembled wormlike micelles are in dynamic equilibrium with their monomers, which are called "living polymers" owing to their ability to break and recombine rapidly. 8,9 The viscoelastic wormlike micelles often show relaxation behavior that can be described by a Maxwell model with a single relaxation time, a living polymer model proposed by Cates et al. 9À11 Viscoelastic wormlike micelles formed by ionic surfactants, especially cationic surfactants, upon addition of various additives have been studied extensively. 12À18 The additives are either simple inorganic salts or structure-forming benzyl hydrotropes, with the molar ratio of salt to surfactant typically above 1 for the former while much lower for the latter. The most interesting features of wormlike micellar solutions are their fascinating microstructural evolution and their linear and nonlinear viscoelastic behavior, depending on the interaction between the surfactant and additive molecules. Inorganic counterions (e.g., F À , Cl À , Br À , NO 3 À ) bind moderately to cationic micelles and thus lead to gradual micellar growth by screening the repulsion between the charged headgroups, 19À22 but for the same charged surfactants, i.e., anionic surfactants, the inorganic salts only play a role in regulating the ionic strength of the solutions. 23 Moreover, at high concentrations of surfactant and salt, phase separation often occurs due to the formation of precipitate, which is generally called the salting-out effect. 24À26 Compared with inorganic salts, organic counterions or hydrotropic salts that strongly bind to the micellar surface are highly efficient in promoting micellar growth 16,22,27 and inducing wormlike micelles at a significantly low ratio of salt to surfactant. However, similar to inorganic salts, only the oppositely charged hydrotropic salts can induce such microstructure transition and viscoelastic behavior in surfactant systems. On the whole, these additives induce complicated viscoelastic responses which are strongly dependent on the electric properties of the additives, and only the oppositely charged additives can show strong interaction with the surfactants, regardless of whether they are inorganic salts or hydrotropic salts.Although simple additive effects for ionic surfactants have been studied extensively, there are few reports of the abovementioned effects induced only by one salt for both cationic and anionic surfactants. It is believed that the present study is the first example that inorganic salt induces micellar growth and viscoelastic behavior significantly in both cationic and anionic surfactant soluti...