| ALTIPLANO | Advice to visit a S American plain or plateau |
| LLANO | South American plain or steppe |
| CAMPOS | S. American plain |
| PAMPAS | S American plain |
| NICHE | With a fluted, plain or scalloped half-dome heading or concha, an exedra or recess in a wall to hold a statue or other ornament (5) |
| LLANERO | S American plains dwelling cowboy (7) |
| SEA | Lunar basalt plain or mare; an expanse of saltwater with a partially bordering a land mass; or, (with "the"), a sailor's life or career (3) |
| SCONES | Thought to derive from early Dutch for "fine bread", baked rounds or quadrants of plain or fruited dough, subject to a long-running debate as to whether said cakes are spread with jam first, or cream |
| CRACKERS | Word for a hard type of plain or savoury biscuit; or, something equally as crisp, crunchy, shattery or snappable, such as peanut brittle, a hard nutty filling for confectionery or a scratching of friz |
| MYSTERYSHOPPER | One employed to visit a retail outlet incognito to assess the quality of goods or services (7,7) |
| ANGELICA | Nigel excited to visit a cafe's upper half to see this woman (8) |
| TAPIR | Organised trip to catch a S American mammal |
| PATAGONIA | Man or woman in the past climbing in a S American region |
| BOGOTA | Book to travel around a S American city (6) |
| THORNBILL | An Australian warbler or a S American hummingbird (9) |
| INCA | A S American Indian found in a train carriage |
| VISA | Endorsement for a foreigner to visit a country |
| APARTMENT | Average people take time to visit a tenant primarily or flat (9) |
| BOLIVIA | I sent a high-ball back via a S. American country (7) |
| CARACALLA | A girl to visit a Roman emperor (9) |