The Eurostar company announced Wednesday it will operate all day service on Thursday, a stride back to normal operation on Christmas Eve after three days of suspension and two days of partial service.
The train service will be throughout Thursday to a modified timetable, the company said in a statement and recommended passengers "arrive at the station an hour before their original departure time."
It also promised to provide seats for passengers who "hold tickets for any day between Dec. 19-23" in the update statement.
Due to the European snowfall in December, four Eurostar trains broke down inside the Manche Tunnel on Dec. 18 and trapped over 2000 passengers.
Consequently, all Eurostar services were canceled from Dec. 19 through Dec. 21 and frustrated other thousands of holiday travelers.
The company partially resumed the train service on Tuesday, with passengers unable to travel over the three-day stoppage given priority.
Eurostar's chief official Nicolas Petrovic said that a full recovery can not be expected until Dec. 28.
Eurostar trains shuttle between Paris-London and Brussels- London with about 40,000 people a day during normal operations.