
Eurostar has quietly updated its service bulletin to confirm a fresh round of ‘operational-constraint’ cancellations between 28 and 31 October 2025, wiping out dozens of peak-time services on the London-Paris-Brussels-Amsterdam corridor. According to the live-traffic page, flagged at 14:24 CET on 28 October, the operator will run a reduced timetable over the four-day window, citing rolling-stock rotation and crew-availability issues.
For French employers that shifted short-haul mobility from air to rail to reduce scope-3 emissions, the news is a setback. The cancellations coincide with the tail-end of the Toussaint school holidays, traditionally one of Eurostar’s heaviest booking periods. Capacity on the remaining trains is expected to sell out quickly, driving some travellers back to regional airports just as the Italian ground-staff strike unfolds.
Corporate travel buyers report that Eurostar’s automated re-accommodation tool is offering next-day alternatives rather than same-day solutions for many affected PNRs, triggering overnight hotel and per-diem costs. Under EU rail passenger rights, compensation tops out at 50 % of the fare for delays longer than 120 minutes, but only if travellers submit claims within three months—a detail mobility teams will need to track.
The disruption also raises wider questions about resilience ahead of the 12 October roll-out of the EU Entry/Exit System (EES). Once biometric registration becomes mandatory for non-EU nationals, initial border-control processing is forecast to add five to ten minutes per passenger at St Pancras and Paris Nord. Any cut in train frequency magnifies the risk of queue spill-over into public areas—a scenario French border-police unions have flagged in recent briefings.
To mitigate exposure, companies should (1) encourage employees to activate Eurostar alerts in the carrier’s app; (2) pre-approve flexible air or overnight stay options; and (3) remind non-EU assignees to travel with proof of French residence to expedite manual stamp procedures if e-gates are offline.
For French employers that shifted short-haul mobility from air to rail to reduce scope-3 emissions, the news is a setback. The cancellations coincide with the tail-end of the Toussaint school holidays, traditionally one of Eurostar’s heaviest booking periods. Capacity on the remaining trains is expected to sell out quickly, driving some travellers back to regional airports just as the Italian ground-staff strike unfolds.
Corporate travel buyers report that Eurostar’s automated re-accommodation tool is offering next-day alternatives rather than same-day solutions for many affected PNRs, triggering overnight hotel and per-diem costs. Under EU rail passenger rights, compensation tops out at 50 % of the fare for delays longer than 120 minutes, but only if travellers submit claims within three months—a detail mobility teams will need to track.
The disruption also raises wider questions about resilience ahead of the 12 October roll-out of the EU Entry/Exit System (EES). Once biometric registration becomes mandatory for non-EU nationals, initial border-control processing is forecast to add five to ten minutes per passenger at St Pancras and Paris Nord. Any cut in train frequency magnifies the risk of queue spill-over into public areas—a scenario French border-police unions have flagged in recent briefings.
To mitigate exposure, companies should (1) encourage employees to activate Eurostar alerts in the carrier’s app; (2) pre-approve flexible air or overnight stay options; and (3) remind non-EU assignees to travel with proof of French residence to expedite manual stamp procedures if e-gates are offline.








