| GARRET | Room on the top floor of a house |
| ATTIC | Top floor of a house |
| PENTHOUSE | Luxurious flat or suite on the top floor of a tall building (9) |
| LADDER | The part of a fire truck that can give firefighters a lift to the top floor of a burning building |
| AROOMWITHAVIEW | "___ is what you'd book on the top floor of some high-rise hotel" |
| BUILDANAIRPLANE | You're television's Angus MacGyver. You're being held hostage at the top floor of a construction site in a room with a 17-Across, some 32-Across, and a few 41-Across. What do you do to escape? |
| POSH | Like the top floor of the Beverly Wilshire |
| LOFT | Top floor of a warehouse |
| LOBBY | Waiting room on the ground floor of a hospital or office |
| GALLERY | Take in cookhouse on the top floor (7) |
| HIGHROBBERY | Break-in on the top floor? |
| PENTHOUSES | They're on the top floor or shelf? (10) |
| ALOFT | Empty new flat on the top floor? |
| REVAMPSUP | Does a makeover on the top floors? |
| UPPERSTORY | Second floor of a home, say |
| BOTTOM | Word used to describe the foot of a hill, the bed of the sea, floor of a valley or the far end of a garden (6) |
| SOLE | Underside or bottom of a boot, clubhead, foot, oven or plough; the floor of a ship's cabin; or, the end of the chanter of a set of bagpipes (4) |
| ELOISE | Character who lives on the "tippy-top floor" of the Plaza Hotel |
| PLATFORM | From "ground plan" , 'flat shape", a raised level, surface of planks etc, such as a stage for speakers, a place for mounting guns, the floor of a bus or a pavement for rail passengers; or, a basis of |
| TWOC | At a motel, the third room on the second floor, perhaps |