| LASTLEG | End of a journey |
| ETA | Anticipated end of a journey (inits)(3) |
| DESTINATION | Predetermined end of a journey |
| ABNORMAL | The ends of a journey and not getting sickness: that's unusual (8) |
| START | Old English "caper, fling, leap, plunge headlong", today a commencement or a sudden movement of surprise; dawn or sunrise; or, the beginning of a journey or a race, perhaps for a prize (5) |
| INFERNO | Alluding to Dante's description of a journey through hell, a word for perdition; a fire raging out of control; or, any hellish place of pain or turmoil (7) |
| SLEIGHRIDE | Description of a journey taken on a type of horse- or reindeer-drawn sled; or, a light orchestral standard originally conceived by Leroy Anderson (6,4) |
| LEGS | Sections of a journey; stages of a relay race; or, limbs of locomotion (4) |
| LEG | Part of a journey or a part of the body |
| STOPOVER | A short stay in a place between parts of a journey (8) |
| IMADEIT | "That was a heck of a journey" |
| LAP | Section of a journey or a race |
| STARTLED | Getting a fright at the beginning of a journey (8) |
| STORMING | Getting a fright at the beginning of a journey (8) |
| LAYSOVER | Stops for a while in the course of a journey |
| LEGENDARY | Fabulous part of a journey to a railway terminus, at first (9) |
| GOAL | One's aim; the finishing point of a journey or race; or, a netted target in football, hockey or other sport (4) |
| ELIE | First name of the author of A Journey Into Faith |
| ITINERARY | What is a detailed plan of a journey? (9) |
| RAGS | Start of a journey to wealth |