| HARDTOHOLD | It's difficult to get stolen gear back - anything antique to a bar of soap, for instance (4,2,4) |
| TALLOW | Pull everyone inside to make soap, for instance |
| HOTSPOT | Dangerous location from which to get stolen jumpers returned (3,4) |
| OAP | A selection of soaps for the senior citizen (1,1,1) |
| TOOLBAG | Stolen gear going around, claim it belongs to workman? (7) |
| ELEGANT | Polished table leg -- antique, to an extent (7) |
| SHAMPOO | It might be next to a bar of soap |
| KISS | Plonker gets winter sports gear back to front? No, other way round (4) |
| ROADTRIP | Words that follow Antiques to give the title of a show in which experts travel around buying and selling items (4,4) |
| STKITTS | West Indian island making street gear (back street) (2,5) |
| STORE | Keep some antiques to repair (5) |
| TWO | Bring back anything from Yorkshire for couple (3) |
| GYNAECOLOGIST | Specialist sending back anything that's not thin and green (13) |
| CROW | Short word for a bar of iron with a beak-like end; the triumphant caw of a cockerel; the joyful cry of a baby or of a boastful person; or, a small raven-like bird with a raucous call (4) |
| STOCKINGFILLER | One of a series of gifts placed in a sock at Christmas such as a bar of soap, bath cube, clementine, chocolate coin, monogrammed handkerchief ... (8,6) |
| CHOCAHOLIC | One keen to get to a bar? (10) |
| EASTENDERS | Soap, for example, used by nurses after end of procedure (10) |
| ONTHEHOUSE | Music to a bar customer's ears |
| BAND | A bar of colour; a belt; a binding for banknotes or braids; a body of brass instrumentalists, brothers, brumbies or burglars; or, a bond (4) |
| QUEENVICTORIA | Former monarch gets a bar of soap (5,8) |