The supreme court this month ordered Israel to free illegal migrants held for more than a year at the Holot Detention Centre in the Negev desert, in a ruling that affected 1,178 asylum seekers.
A first batch of hundreds was freed yesterday but barred from entering the cities of Tel Aviv and Eilat in the face of hostility from many residents.
Yesterday's release completed compliance with the ruling.
"That's it," an Israel Prisons Service spokeswoman told AFP.
Official figures show 45,000 illegal immigrants are in Israel, almost all from Eritrea and Sudan.
Most of those who have not been detained live in poor areas of southern Tel Aviv, where there have been several protests over their presence.
Tel Aviv mayor Ron Hulda strongly criticised the government, saying: "Each minister advocates a different policy and engages in populist and racist declarations."
He proposed granting work permits to migrants so that they can disperse throughout Israel and not be concentrated in Tel Aviv, where he said there were 30,000-35,000 African migrants.
Israel's supreme court two weeks ago overturned a provision of a law that would have allowed illegal immigrants to be held for up to 20 months without trial.
It ruled that illegal migrants held for more than a year should be released within two weeks.
Rightwing Israeli politicians have called for action to limit illegal migration, and rights groups say thousands of African asylum seekers have been coerced into "voluntary" departures.
After today's releases there will be 550 people remaining in the Holot Detention Centre, according to the prison authorities.
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