| BUCKUP | Hasten to make the price a dollar higher |
| BUCKSUP | Takes heart when dollar's higher (5,2) |
| FARE | The price a passenger has to pay to take a bus, train, etc. |
| CEDE | Helps to make the price dear, you'll agree (4) |
| COSTUME | The price a backward bird gets for clothing (7) |
| APATH | Beat ___ to one's door (hasten to make contact with someone): 2 wds. |
| ATHENS | Hasten to make capital |
| UNDERCUT | The act of chopping below or slashing a price; a notch in a tree trunk to direct its fall; an upward blow; or, the tenderloin/fillet of a sirloin of beef (8) |
| MANSFIELDPARK | Jane Austen novel centred on Fanny Price, a poor relation taken to live with her cousins on the estate after which the book is titled (9,4) |
| RECIPE | Wrongly price a quarter the ingredients for the dish (6) |
| PRINCE | For a price, a Northerner will be accepted into the royal family |
| PRECIOUS | From the Latin for "price", a word used to mean of great value or worth; or, cherished/treasured (8) |
| RAMP | From "clamber, climb, crawl, creep", an incline or slope; an upward bend in a bannister; a swindle involving exorbitant prices; a mobile staircase; or, a sleeping policeman (4) |
| AFAR | A reduced ticket price a long way off (4) |
| BID | Highest price a buyer will pay for a stock |
| RUN | Hasten to add to the score (3) |
| RUSHLIGHT | Hasten to land, with a little help in the dark (9) |
| COSTARICA | Price a wealthy husband exchanged for a place in Central America (5,4) |
| HEROINE | A woman admired for her brave or courageous deeds; or, with examples including Emma Woodhouse and Fanny Price, a female protagonist (7) |
| COSTAL | Price a pound of ribs (6) |