• Members listed in italics did not contest their seat at this election. • The Liberal National Party also retained the seat of Whitsunday, where the sitting Liberal National member had resigned and contested the election as a member of their own party. The swing between the major parties in each seat varied across the state. However, Labor managed a small statewide swing to it. Queenslanders have been known to, at some points in time, vote for Labor on the state level and the LNP on the federal level; in
2019, when the federal
Coalition government led by
Scott Morrison was unexpectedly re-elected for a third consecutive term, the LNP won
23 of the 30 House of Representatives seats in Queensland and 58.44% of the
two-party-preferred vote in the state, with Morrison's victory being credited to a stronger-than-expected performance in Queensland and
Tasmania, despite Queensland having a state Labor government. Ultimately, Labor managed to gain five seats from the LNP, including two
Sunshine Coast seats (
Caloundra and
Nicklin), two seats in smaller regional cities (
Bundaberg and
Hervey Bay) and one seat in
Brisbane (
Pumicestone). However, Labor lost the seat of
South Brisbane to the Greens, therefore giving Labor a net seat change of +4. The seat of Bundaberg was won by Labor with a margin of just nine votes, currently the smallest margin of any federal or state electorate in Australia. Labor's defeat in South Brisbane was significant in two ways. The Greens won their second state seat in Queensland, after winning
Maiwar from the LNP in
2017. However, it also led to the defeat of sitting
Deputy Premier Jackie Trad. Trad became the first sitting Deputy Premier of Queensland to be
unseated since
1947 (when Labor's
Ted Walsh was unseated). One Nation contested 90 seats at this election, but the party's vote dropped dramatically, having almost halved. One Nation finished second in many seats in 2017, but in 2020 the party only finished second in one seat: the Labor-held seat of
Bundamba. Nevertheless, One Nation managed to get an increased majority in the only lower house seat in Australia that it currently holds:
Mirani (represented by
Stephen Andrew since 2017). While Labor received a small swing to it in most seats, the party did lose some ground to the LNP in a few key seats, including
Buderim,
Cook,
Mackay,
Toowoomba North and
Whitsunday. The LNP managed to regain the seat of Whitsunday, where the sitting member (
Jason Costigan) was expelled from the LNP and formed his own party,
North Queensland First. The LNP candidate,
Amanda Camm, managed to win the seat with an increased majority over the Labor Party. == Post-election pendulum ==