Almost $1 million has been donated so far to political parties during the Queensland election campaign, a new electronic disclosure system has revealed.

Donations must now be revealed within seven business days, with both the donor and recipient required to lodge matching returns.

The Electoral Commission Queensland (ECQ) website shows the Liberal National Party (LNP) leads the pack, receiving $493,000 in the two weeks since the election was called on October 28.

In the same period of time, Labor has received $316,000 in donations.

PriceWaterhouseCoopers donated $2,058 to Labor on the same day Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk revealed that her partner Shaun Drabsch, who works for the company, was involved in a loan application for Adani.

Donations to Qld parties Parties Donations 29/10/17 until 11/11/17 ALP $316,286 LNP $493,361 KAP $23,333 One Nation $12,510 Greens $22,150 Source: ECQ - Donor Location website

Almost $200,000 of the Labor donation amount has come from unions, including $28,600 from the Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union, $26,700 from the Communications, Electrical and Plumbing Union and $25,000 from the Queensland branch of the Maritime Union.

The most generous LNP donors during the campaign have been individuals with amounts up to $75,000.

The party has also received $16,000 from waste management company JJ Richards and Sons.

The Queensland branch of Pauline Hanson's One Nation party sits at $12,500 in donations over the campaign period, all from individual donors.

Katter's Australian Party has received $23,300 including $15,000 from the Taxi Council Queensland.

The Queensland Greens donations so far total $22,150, all from individuals.

Real-time disclosure a Queensland first

This is the first Queensland election where voters can see in almost real time online who is giving and to whom.

Previously, donations would only be disclosed after an election, up to six months later.

The new electronic disclosure system is managed by the ECQ.

The Palaszczuk Government introduced the reform in March, in a bid to improve transparency.

All political donations in Queensland over $1,000 must be declared, after Labor in 2015 reversed the previous LNP government's move to lift the disclosure threshold to $12,800.