Warplanes had struck three buildings identified as belonging to IS, the Chief of General Staff's office said in a statement.
A vehicle and motorcycle also were destroyed in the airstrike yesterday evening that came less than two days before a US-Russia agreement on a cease-fire in Syria takes effect.
In separate airstrike today, Turkish jets struck Kurdish rebel targets in northern Iraq, killing 13 militants.
The state-run Anadolu news agency cited a statement from the Chief of General Staff's office saying the militants were killed in three airstrikes that also took out weapons emplacements in Iraq's Qandil mountains and the Bazian and Avasheen regions.
Also Read
Erdogan said in a televised message marking the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha that Turkey has a "primary duty" to its people to destroy IS and prevent it from staging attacks in Turkey.
He added that the Turkish government is determined to end the "scourge" of the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or PKK, which renewed its 30-year insurgency for autonomy within Turkey after peace talks failed last year.
Last month, Turkey sent tanks across the Syrian border to help rebels retake Jarablus, a key IS-held border town, and to contain the expansion of a Syrian Kurdish militia.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content