Mr Miles kicked off his election campaign in Townsville on Tuesday after the government went into caretaker mode for the October 26 poll.
The opposition is tipped to end Labor's nine year reign, with Liberal National Party leader David Crisafulli consistently leading the polls.
The latest results reveal the LNP leads Mr Miles' Labor 56 per cent to 44 per cent on a two-party preferred basis.
The premier wasted little time flying to Townsville to sway voters on Tuesday, with north Queensland seats set to be make-or-break.
He will continue campaigning on Wednesday in regional areas which are some of the worst hit by the key election issues - youth crime, housing, health and cost of living pressures.
Labor has 51 of Queensland parliament's 93 seats, with six of those across Townsville and Cairns.
To govern in Queensland, a party needs 47 seats to win an election with a majority.Â
The LNP currently holds 35 but experts have predicted a "big swing" at the election in favour of the opposition.
Mr Miles on Tuesday ruled out deals with the Greens or Katter's Australia Party to govern.
The Greens currently hold two seats while KAP has four.
"No. There will be no deals, no coalition governments," he said on Tuesday.
"I've been in minority government, I have no intention and I can categorically rule out any deals with anyone."
However Mr Miles said in the event of no parliamentary majority, he would follow process and test the numbers of the floor.
"If the people of Queensland return a different parliamentary makeup and if neither party can make a majority, then the existing government tests numbers on the floor of parliament," he said.
Mr Crisafulli is looking to become the first LNP premier since Campbell Newman's stint between 2012 and 2015.
Youth crime was high on the agenda for both parties on opening campaign day.
Mr Miles said he would invest $3 million in early intervention and prevention programs in Townsville.
Mr Crisafulli announced $40 million in crime prevention for small business and community facilities.