The interactions between a linear polymer, sodium poly(2-acrylamide-2-methylpropane sulfonate), and two cationic surfactants, dodecylpyridinium chloride and tetradecylpyridinium chloride and their mixtures with different ratios, were studied by a potentiometric titration method using a surfactant-selective electrode. The ideal mixing/ideal cooperative binding model we had proposed previously was applied to successfully predict the binding isotherms of the mixed surfactant systems and the critical aggregation concentrations of the binding. The binding of surfactant mixtures to polymers is similar to the ideal mixed micelle formation and a sort of synergetic effect was found during the binding process.