| GOINGFORASONG | Fetching a son's grand, being sold for a trifle (5,3,1,4) |
| NEXTTONOTHING | Noting tenth ox was sold for a song (4,2,7) |
| GRANDCHILDREN | A son's or daughter's offspring (13) |
| WHIM | From a word for a trifle, trinket or an odd ridiculous notion, a term for a caprice or sudden passing fancy (4) |
| BAGATELLE | Arrest a cashier pretty well for a trifle (9) |
| AJAR | A container for a trifle left open |
| TOPPS | Issuer of a Mickey Mantle card sold for a record amount |
| INVITING | Modern sextet can, with a grand - being seductive |
| WAGTAIL | What a gundog might do fetching a bird? (7) |
| ASTORMINATEACUP | Aromatic peanuts crushed too much for a trifle? (1,5,2,1,6) |
| TIPSYCAKE | Take spicy ingredients mixed for a trifle at tea (5,4) |
| NOTHING | Observing husband going in for a trifle (7) |
| FIDDLE | Instrument can be obtained for a trifle (6) |
| GOING | Going, _, Gone! cry at auctions means: 'being sold, almost sold, sold!' (5) |
| SUPERHEROES | In a painting that sold for a personal record $23 million on March 23, street artist Banksy compares British nurses in the Covid era to these |
| GAZETTE | From "halfpennyworth of news", a type of newspaper originally sold for a Venetian coin of very little value (7) |
| THENEWYORKTIMES | It sold for a penny at its 1851 launch |
| POLLOCK | Whose "drip painting" No. 5, 1948 sold for a record $140m in 2005? (7) |
| IRISES | Van Gogh painting sold for a record $53.9 million in 1987 |
| CLOUDLESS | Fine clues sold for a pound (9) |