The army launched an offensive in the tribal district, home to the fabled Khyber Pass into neighbouring Afghanistan, eight days ago after a suicide bomber targeted a border post killing 22 policemen.
"Security forces killed at least 24 militants and destroyed two militant headquarters and two hideouts in Bara town of Khyber," a statement from the paramilitary Frontier Corps said.
The current offensive is against fighters with the Lashkar-e-Islam (Army of Islam), a militant group battling the government in Khyber that has some ties to the Pakistan Taliban.
On Monday, the military had claimed killing 10 militants in Khyber but such tolls are impossible to confirm independently.
Khyber is on the main land and supply route through Pakistan into Afghanistan, where international forces are battling a Taliban insurgency.
Pakistan's government has claimed a number of military successes against the Islamist hardliners this year in and around Swat valley, but attacks continue across the country, mostly in the northwest.
The semi-autonomous northwest tribal belt has become a stronghold for hundreds of extremists who fled Afghanistan after the US-led invasion toppled the hardline Taliban regime in neighbouring Afghanistan in late 2001.
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