"Water has finally arrived from Al-Hafseh, the main water station east of the city to the pumping stations of Sleiman al-Halabi and Bab Neirab inside the city," the official said on condition of anonymity.
"Without electricity, the water will be pumped using generators with fuel provided by the Red Crescent, and water will gradually return to all parts of the city," he told AFP.
Residents had told AFP this week that they had gone about three months without steady water supply, their longest cut in the five-year war.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the water cut ended after the government repaired a pumping station that provided water to Al-Bab, a bastion of the Islamic State jihadist group further east.
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In turn, IS fighters allowed water to be pumped through areas under their control from the Euphrates River into Aleppo city.
But Syria's state news agency SANA said water was once again being pumped from Al-Hafseh "after a 48-day cut by the terrorists of Daesh," or IS.
But a Russian air strike in November on an IS-held treatment plant had left 1.4 million people in the city without any water at all.