| PILESUP | Makes a stack |
| THEOLDMANOFHOY | Olympic cyclist's father makes a stack in Scotland (3,3,3,2,3) |
| COCOA | Thanks to you, old bean, we can make a stack on double business (5) |
| WALL | A brick or dry-stone structure; a stack of mah-jong tiles; a steep cliff-face; or, a line of football defenders forming a barrier against a free kick |
| ROULEAU | A coil of ribbon or a tube of fabric as a trimming for a coat or a dress; or, a stack of coins wrapped in paper (7) |
| CLAMP | Word related to the name of a mollusc for a mechanical vice that also means a heap of root vegetables; a stack of bricks; or, a car immobiliser (5) |
| RICK | A stack of corn or straw with a thatch; a sprain or wrench; a set of shelves for barrels; or, a heap (4) |
| PILE | A heap; a heavy stake; the surface of a carpet; or, a stack of money (4) |
| DEPOSITSLIP | Part of a stack at a bank |
| IHOP | Chain with a Cinn-A-Stack option |
| HAY | Stuff in a stack on a farm |
| SWORE | Made a statement on a stack of Bibles? |
| PEA | Vegetable that's put in a stack of mattresses in a Hans Christian Andersen story |
| LID | Part of a stack at a soda fountain |
| LIBRARIANS | They know where there's a stack of Bibles for those having a job stocking shelves (10) |
| ATTACKS | Has a go at building a stack (7) |
| ENDTABLE | It might have a lamp or a stack of books on it |
| STADDLE | A support for a stack of hay, etc (7) |
| CHIMNEY | Word for a fireplace or furnace originally, later a stack for the escape of said hearth's fumes and smoke (7) |
| WOODPILE | A stack of dead logs, say, could be a rotten place for wildlife! (8) |