A reward of $2m (£1.37m) each will be paid to informers who help arrest Mexico's 24 most-wanted drug gang chiefs, the attorney general has said.
Some 8,000 people have died in the past two years, as drug gangs fight for territory amid government crackdowns.
'Cartels splintering'
Washington is expected to confirm in the next few days that it will be deploying more federal agents along its border with Mexico - to tackle the increase in drug trafficking and related violence.
The BBC's Stephen Gibbs in Mexico City says that with some evidence that drug violence is crossing the border, both governments are under pressure to find a more coordinated policy to undermine the immensely powerful Mexican cartels.
The drug gangs have splintered into six main cartels, under pressure from law enforcement action on both sides of the border, according to the attorney general's office in Mexico.
Among the men on the most-wanted list are the alleged head of the powerful Sinaloa cartel, Joaquin "el Chapo" Guzman, who gained recent additional notoriety after being named by Forbes magazine as one of the world's billionaires.
Others on the most wanted list are the suspected heads of the La Familia and Los Zetas criminal groups.
Some of the men, such as Guzman and Ismael Zamabada, allegedly of the Pacific cartel, are also targeted by separate $5m (£3.43m) bounties from the US government.
The Mexican announcement offers "up to 30m pesos ($2m) to whomever provides information that is useful, true and leads to the location and arrest" of the listed traffickers.
While Mexico has offered rewards for the capture of drug lords in the past, this is the first concerted offer for all the most-wanted cartel members at once.

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