Good news for your Tuesday commute, New York. Most of the weekend’s major subway disruptions are wrapping up by early Monday morning, so Tuesday riders should see near-normal service across most lines. Here’s what you need to know before you head out.
What Lines Are Back to Normal
The following weekend work is scheduled to end by 5 a.m. Monday, meaning Tuesday service should run as expected on these lines:
- N, Q, R, W trains — Full service restored between Queensboro Plaza and Times Sq–42 St. The track replacement work that shut down N trains between these stations all weekend is complete.
- A train — Service between Rockaway Blvd and Ozone Park–Lefferts Blvd resumes. Shuttle buses that ran this corridor over the weekend are no longer needed.
- D train — Bronx service between E 180 St and 149 St–Grand Concourse is restored.
- F train — Normal routing resumes. The weekend reroute via Roosevelt Island between 36 St and 57 St–7 Av is over.
- B train — Woodlawn-bound trains resume normal stopping patterns between 167 St and Burnside Av.
What’s Still Affected
G Line (Crosstown): The MTA’s ongoing signal modernization project on the G line continues into 2026. This 90-year-old signal system is being replaced with modern communications-based train control (CBTC) technology. On select weeknights and weekends, expect service suspensions between Bedford–Nostrand Avs and Church Av, or between Court Sq and Bedford–Nostrand Avs. Check MTA Planned Service Changes for specific dates this week.
There are no other major planned weekday disruptions announced for Tuesday, April 7, but the MTA may post overnight maintenance alerts closer to the date. Always check the MTA app or website before your morning commute.
Borough-by-Borough Quick Scan
- Manhattan: All major trunk lines (1/2/3, 4/5/6, A/C/E, N/Q/R/W) expected to run normal weekday service.
- Brooklyn: G line may have overnight maintenance; all other Brooklyn service normal.
- Queens: N/W service fully restored through Astoria. 7 train running normally.
- The Bronx: D train Bronx service back to normal. 2/5 lines fully operational.
For real-time updates, sign up for MTA email and text alerts or use the MYmta app to track your specific lines.
This article is part of Help New York’s daily subway alert series. Check back every day for the latest service changes so you’re never caught off guard on the platform.

