Crack detection using eddy-current nondestructive testing is often carried out at frequencies such that the skin depth of the induced current is much smaller than the crack dimensions, The induced current then hows in a thin skin at the conductor surface and at the faces of a surface crack, In the case of a crack that acts as an impenetrable barrier to electric current, the electromagnetic field at the crack surface can be represented, at an arbitrary frequency, in terms of a potential which satisfies a two-dimensional Laplace equation, The boundary conditions required in the solution of the Laplace equation have not yet been determined for the general case, but we have derived approximate boundary conditions which are applicable in the thin-skin regime, The conditions derived are valid for cracks in materials of arbitrary permeability, From the harmonic solutions of the Laplace equation, the impedance change of the excitation coil due to the defect has been calculated for cracks in aluminum and ferromagnetic steel, Comparisons between predictions and experimental measurements on rectangular slots show good agreement, thus corroborating the theory and the numerical calculations.