Everything you need to know about New Year travel chaos, including Eurostar disruption

Eurostar passengers are being urged not to travel on 30 December due to ‘a failed LeShuttle train’ in the Channel Tunnel

Everything you need to know about New Year travel chaos, including Eurostar disruption

Britain’s public transport system has come back to life after a Christmas Day closedown – but only slowly and partially. So what are the prospects for travellers with or without a car? These are the key opportunities and problems.

Rail

The Eurostar operation between London St Pancras International and Paris, Brussels and Amsterdam through the Channel Tunnel is in disarray “due to a failed LeShuttle train”. There are reports of passengers being stuck on trains in the tunnel for hours. At least one London-Paris train, which left at 7.01am, is expected to arrive in the French capital four hours late.

All trains on Tuesday 30 December are delayed, typically by two to three hours.

Cancellations are as follows:

London-Paris and Paris-London – four trainsBrussels-London – two trainsLondon-Brussels – one train.Amsterdam-London – one train

Eurostar is telling travellers: “We strongly advise all our passengers to postpone their journey to a different date. We regret that trains that can run are subject to severe delays and last-minute cancellations.”

LeShuttle, the car-carrying operation between Folkestone and Calais, has suspended all trains. Motorists are told: “Services are temporarily suspended for both terminals due to a power supply issue. We are working hard to resolve this. Apologies for any inconvenience caused.”

Within the UK, most rail services have been restored after the Christmas shutdown. But some problems are disrupting trains, especially on CrossCountry services. The network connects England, Wales and Scotland through its hub at Birmingham New Street. Some trains are cancelled or curtailed due to staff shortage.

On Tuesday 30 December, many trains have been cancelled, curtailed or run with some carriages closed to passengers, including links between Cardiff and Nottingham, Manchester and Bournemouth, and southwest England to Scotland.

For example the 6.03am from Birmingham New Street to Edinburgh has nine coaches, but for the majority of its journey – from York to the Scottish capital – the front four coaches are out of use.

Elsewhere, the line along the South Coast between Brighton, Chichester and Portsmouth is closed due to “signalling staff being taken ill”.

National Rail says: “Trains are currently unable to run between Barnham/Chichester and Portsmouth and Southampton. If you are travelling on this route, then please expect your overall journey time to be extended.”

Widespread Network Rail engineering work is underway. Some key stations and lines will close, putting pressure on other routes.

 Network Rail engineers at work

Action station: Network Rail engineers at work (Network Rail)

No trains will run to or from the main London Liverpool Street station – the busiest in Britain – until 2 January. The exception is the Elizabeth line, which will enable travellers to reach Stratford station – where many links, including the Stansted Express, will start and end.

One of the UK’s other busiest stations, London Waterloo, has reopened with reduced service after four days of engineering work.

The West Coast Main Line, which connects London Euston with the West Midlands, northwest England, north Wales and southern Scotland, will be closed on the key stretch from Milton Keynes and Rugby up to and including 4 January.

A key junction at Hanslope, south of Rugby, is being replaced. Rail replacement bus services will operate. In addition, Chiltern Railway from London Marylebone to Birmingham, the East Coast Main Line north from London King’s Cross and the East Midlands line from London St Pancras will take the strain.

Further north, the West Coast Main Line between Preston and Carlisle will close from New Year’s Eve to 15 January inclusive. A shuttle service will connect the two cities via the scenic Settle-Carlisle Railway.

No trains will run on the main line between Leeds and York until the start of services on 3 January.

New Year’s Eve will be quiet, with New Year’s Day seeing fewer travellers still – though in Scotland, almost no trains will run on 1 January.

Crowds will build back on Friday 2 January, with the final weekend of the festive season on Saturday 3 and Sunday 4 January seeing large numbers of travellers – many of them displaced to other lines by Network Rail engineering work.

Road

The AA predicts that before the big return to work on 5 January 2026, traffic will peak on 30 December.

New Year’s Day will be the quietest festive travel day.

Key locations for congestion are:

M25, particularly between the M4 at Heathrow and the M1, plus near Bluewater in KentM4 from M5 junction near Bristol to CardiffM5 south of Bristol and also close to the M6 junction in the West MidlandsM6 through the West Midlands from the M42 junction to Wolverhampton M60 around Manchester, near the Trafford Centre and between junction 7 (Altrincham) and the M62 junction

In addition, the M27 in Hampshire is closed between junctions 9 and 11 until 4am on 4 January.

The quietest day on the road network will be 1 January 2026

The quietest day on the road network will be 1 January 2026 (Simon Calder)

Ferry

Sailings are running normally between the Port of Dover, Calais and Dunkirk. The port is urging drivers not to arrive more than two hours before their scheduled departure. Pressure is likely to increase on 30 December due to the suspension of LeShuttle car-carrying trains between Folkestone and Calais.

Unlike aviation, there is no penalty for missing a ferry at Dover due to congestion; you will simply be rebooked free of charge. “If you missed your ferry, please don’t worry,” the port is telling motorists. “You’ll be put on the next available sailing.”

Caledonian MacBrayne ferries in western Scotland are recovering after technical problems caused some cancellations.

No CalMac vessels will operate on New Year’s Day, and some services on 2 January are “request only”.

Air

Currently, the main problems affecting travellers to and from the eastern parts of North America. Extreme wintry weather has caused thousands of flights to be grounded since Christmas Day. Domestic links have been worst affected, but some services between the US, Canada and London Heathrow are cancelled or heavily delayed.

Air Canada is warning that “snow, freezing rain, and strong wind conditions” are causing disruption across the east of the nation – particularly at the main hub, Toronto Pearson, as well as Montreal, Ottawa and Halifax.

All the overnight flights from Toronto to London Heathrow eventually departed, but most were delayed by an hour or more. An Air Canada flight on the route is currently four hours late. The return flight to Canada’s largest city, AC855, is expected to be two hours late.

Many onward links to other airports in North America are cancelled.

Under air passengers’ rights rules, travellers booked on UK airlines whose flights are cancelled are entitled to be flown to their destination as soon as possible on any carrier, and to be provided with meals and hotels until they get there. Those with tickets on US and Canadian airlines who are returning from North America have no such protection.

Ryanair and easyJet aircraft at London Gatwick airport

Ryanair and easyJet aircraft at London Gatwick airport (Simon Calder)

During the 17 days of the festive spell from 19 December to 4 January, aviation analysts at Cirium report 42,046 flights are scheduled to depart from UK airports with a total of 7.8 million seats. That is an average of more than 100 takeoffs per hour, with almost 20,000 seats.

Departures are up 2 per cent compared with the festive period in 2024, and available departing seats are up 4 per cent year on year.

London Heathrow has the highest number of flights, with one in five departures being from the UK’s busiest hub. It is expecting its busiest festive spell to date, as are Birmingham and Manchester airports.

The top destinations from many airports are:

AlicanteAmsterdamDubaiDublin GenevaParis CDGTenerife

This article is kept updated with the latest information.

Read more: Rail passenger offered £10k compensation for 18-minute train delay