Commuters have avoided travel misery after remaining London Underground strikes for this week and next were called off by drivers' union Aslef.
Members of Aslef were due to walkout on Thursday and against next Tuesday as part of a dispute over pay, which would have resulted in "little to no service" on London Underground lines.
However, Aslef suspended the planned industrial action on Tuesday after reaching an improved pay offer for Tube drivers.
Members of the Aslef union had been due to walkout across the London Underground (TfL) network on Nov 7 and Nov 12. The strikes have now been suspended.
Aslef, the smaller of two unions representing Tube drivers, called off the London Underground strikes on Tuesday.
Finn Brennan, Aslef's full-time organiser on London Underground, said: "Following fresh talks, and an improved offer, Aslef has agreed to suspend our planned industrial action on London Underground.
"Details of the offer will be discussed with our reps at a meeting on Thursday.
"We are pleased that this progress has been made and strike action averted at this time."
Which lines were due to be affected?
The strikes threatened to cripple the capital's Tube services, with the TfL warning of "severe disruption" on London Underground lines. There are around 5m passenger journeys per day on the network.
Commuters were warned against little to no services on strike days because Aslef drivers work across the London Underground network apart from a few lines.
Other TfL services, including the London Overground and the DLR, were not set to strike but could have been disrupted by station closures.
Other transport services and roads were also due to be extremely busy, further delaying journeys.
The union claimed the initial offer meant Underground drivers would stay on a lower salary than drivers on other TfL services while working longer hours.
Ms Brennan previously told union members: "There is nothing new in this pay offer for train drivers or Instructor Operators.
"It leaves you working more days per week and longer hours than drivers on the Elizabeth line or London Overground for less money."