"IS withdrew from 17 towns and villages and is now effectively outside of Aleppo province after having a presence there for four years," said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Regime forces had been advancing on a sliver of southeastern Aleppo province around a key highway linking Hama province to the southwest and Raqa province further east.
Abdel Rahman said regime forces seized control of the road late last night, prompting the remaining IS fighters to flee.
"The military operation is ongoing and Daesh withdrew from the Aleppan countryside towards rural territory in Hama and Raqa," the source told AFP, using the Arabic acronym for IS.
"The Syrian army is clearing out the last few metres," the source added.
A second military source, quoted by Syrian state news agency SANA, also confirmed that IS had pulled out of territory along the Ithraya-Rasafa highway.
Since early 2015, multi-front offensives against IS have eaten away at territory the group held in Aleppo province.
US-backed Kurdish and allied Arab fighters ousted the jihadists from Kobane on the Turkish border in 2015 and from the key city of Manbij last year.
In neighbouring Raqa province, a US-backed offensive is bearing down on the provincial capital of the same name, which has served as the jihadists' de facto Syrian capital.
Abdel Rahman described today's withdrawal as "a new loss for IS that decreases its influence and demonstrates that we are watching its collapse as an organisation that can manage geographical territory".
Syria's conflict broke out in March 2011 with protests against President Bashar al-Assad, before turning into a complex, bloody war.
Talks aimed at reaching a lasting ceasefire will resume in the Kazakh capital Astana next week, before another round of UN-backed peace negotiations in Geneva in mid-July.
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