The design of remediation strategies for nonaqueous phase liquid (NAPL) contaminants involves predicting the rate of NAPL dissolution. A physically based model of an idealized pore geometry was developed to predict nonaqueous phase liquid dissolution rate coefficients. A bundle of parallel pores in series model is used to represent NAPL dissolution as a function of three processes: pore diffusion, corner diffusion, and mixing and multiple contact. The dissolution rate coefficient is expressed in terms of the modified Sherwood number (Sh′) and is a function of Peclet (Pe) number. The model captures the complex behavior of Sh′ versus Pe data for both water-wet (Powers, 1992) and NAPL-wet (Parker et al., 1991) media. For water-wet media, the observed behavior can be broken down into four distinct regions. Each region represents a different physical process controlling NAPL dissolution: the low-Pe region is controlled by pore diffusion; the low- to moderate-Pe region is a transition zone; the moderate-Pe region is controlled by mixing and multiple contact; and the high-Pe region is controlled by corner diffusion. For the high-Pe conditions typical of most column experiments, the model involves only one fitting parameter. For NAPL-wet media, NAPL dissolution is governed exclusively by corner diffusion, and the model again involves only one fitting parameter.