Violence including the devastating war with the Islamic State jihadist group has displaced 3.3 million Iraqis in the past two years, while some 250,000 Syrians have fled to Iraq to escape the war in their country.
"We want to use this money to reach 7.3 million people. These are the most vulnerable people in Iraq," UN humanitarian coordinator for Iraq Lise Grande told a Baghdad news conference.
"Our top priority is to get to the people who are in the most trouble and to give them what they need in order to survive - food, cash, shelter, water," Grande said.
"The needs of the displaced families are greater than our capacity, and therefore we need support from donor countries," Jassem Mohammed al-Jaff, the minister of migration and displacement, said at the news conference.
Iraq plans to spend more than USD 1.5 billion on humanitarian assistance in 2016, but faces a shortfall of some USD 891 million that the funding appeal will help to address, according to the UN.
The Islamic State group overran large areas north and west of Baghdad in 2014, and Iraqi forces are battling to push the jihadists back.
The already huge number of displaced Iraqis is expected to increase further in 2016 as Iraqi forces fight to retake areas in Anbar and Nineveh provinces.
"Depending on the intensity of fighting and the scale of violence in the months ahead, 11 million Iraqis, perhaps even 12 to 13 million, may need some form of humanitarian assistance by the end of 2016," the UN said.
"Perhaps an additional 1 million will be impacted by the battle for Mosul," the plan says, referring to Iraq's second city that is the jihadists' main hub in the country.
