The flooded areas helped after the Army flew to assist in recovery efforts and rebuild a key bridge that collapsed in the deadly flood.
However, there are still more showers and storm forecasts in the flood threat, ensuring a more anxious moment for North Queensland residents.
The Prime Minister arrived in Townsville on Thursday to visit flooded areas, including the devastated Ollera Creek Bridge in downpour days, cutting off the main arterial roads of the Bruce Highway.
Anthony Albanese joins Queensland Prime Minister David Crisafulli to return to the garrison city at the Townsville Disaster Management Center, sparking more fear of flooding .
"I made breakfast TV this morning in the rain and I could hardly hear it because it fell on the metal roof," Albanes said.
He was at a disaster meeting at the busy management center and then headed to the Ollera Creek Bridge to rebuild, which would restore key links to the isolated community of Ingham.
The town has been one of the worst hits caused by floods, which have caused the power and forced hundreds of people to evacuate in the north, two people killed and a man disappeared after being swept Tuesday night.
Australian Defense Forces personnel are assisting Army helicopters borrowed from Singapore to build temporary crossings on the bridge to help provide essentials to popular areas like Ingham.
Another 300 emergency service personnel also arrived in the north as it prepared for wetter weather.
Residents affected by the flood were as anxious as Marion Canty, whose houses went bankrupt for several days.
"I'm really worried," she said.
Canty sat isolated without strength on Sunday, watching the flood flooding the bottom of her Giru home in southern Townsville.
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She has experienced at least four floods, but the weekend incident was by far the worst.
Coupled with her anxiety, it marked the first flood, with no husband lost five weeks ago.
"I feel like I'm left alone," she said.
Until Friday, there were a lot of showers in Townsville and the wet weather spread out into the Queensland interior.
As the rains from 50mm to 150mm were slammed, showers and storms in the north made the north storm violently attack north.
Some of the heaviest waterfalls were recorded in Longreach and Hughenden as well as Emerald and the fiercely attacked Hard Ingham.
Ingham floods have cut electricity for several days, telecommunications have been interrupted and at one stage with residents has created food supplies, telling them they have run out of tap water.
The focus is on restoring power, and the crew evaluates the local sub-station, which is completely submerged.
The Ingham community is rolling up after the two women are killed while emergency services are still searching for the man to be swept off Thursday.
Additional police patrols were also deployed to combat robbery, with three offences reported at Rosley and Rail Manor in Ingham and Townsville.
āIām disgusted with reports of people in the community taking advantage of this weather event and the damage they have caused in our area,ā Townsville Suputt Lawson said.
The Meteorological Bureau warned on Thursday that massive rainfall in northern Queensland.
On Thursday, heavy waterfalls in McKay and Townsville were expected to be extensive inland from Mount Isa to most of the northern part of Rockhampton.
Many flood watches and warnings were issued in the northern and central Queensland.