The village is located west of its municipal seat, town of Ruma. It is stretched along the both sides of the Ruma-Sremska Mitrovica road, which southwest of the village crosses both the railway and highway Belgrade-Zagreb. It functions as an adjoining suburb of Ruma as it almost makes one continuously built-up area with it.
Geography
Voganj is a rural settlement of the semi-compact type. It is located on the loess plateau at an altitude of. It covers an area of and statistically consists of two cadastre municipalities: Voganj and Marđelos. It is a typical road settlement, stretched along the road. It consists of two parts: much larger Voganj and smaller and separated Erem. East of the village flows the river Kudoš, separating Voganj and Ruma, while on the west a creek Mančelov Gat passes next to the settlement. Both streams stretch in the north-south direction and flow into the Sava river.
Erem
Erem is a hamlet of Voganj, to the west. It is connected to the rest of the village via the street which splits off the Ruma-Sremska Mitrovica road near the Voganj railway station. Erem developed after World War II and was settled by the colonists from the regions of Herzegovina and Lika and Kordun. In 2018, Erem consisted of 33 houses centered around one, long street with some 100 inhabitants. The area was a wasteland. In the mid-18th century, the counts from the Pejačević family held large herds of pigs and cattle in the area of modern Erem and also built the quarters for their servants with families. Next to the stables they built the railway station, one of the oldest in Syrmia. Modern Voganj railway station is located on the same place. There is no definite answer on the origin of the hamlet's name. Theories include the Hungarian name for joy, Greek word erēmitēs, and French ermitage, a secluded place. The settlement is entirely agricultural. In 2010s the waterworks was introduced.
According to the latest census, Voganj had 1,506 inhabitants in 2011, and has been steadily depopulating since the 1980s. The village has a Serbethnic majority. Serbian population is mixed, being of both origins: old, local population and colonists from the planned colonization in the years after World War II. The two most spread slavas are Saint John and Saint Nicholas.
Economy
The main branches of economy are crop farming and husbandry. Principal products include wheat, corn and pigs.