The field experiments were conducted at Instructional Farm, College of Agriculture, Swami Keshwanand Rajasthan Agricultural University, Bikaner, for two consecutive Kharif seasons in 2018 and 2019. Experiments were conducted in a split plot design and replicated three times. In the main plot, four irrigation levels (40, 60, 80, and 100 percent PE), in the sub-plot, two crop geometry (normal sowing at 50 cm row spacing and paired row sowing at 30 cm x 70 cm) and in the sub-sub plot, three mulch (no mulch, straw, and plastic mulch) were assigned. Different irrigation levels, crop geometry and mulch treatments had significant impact on okra growth and quality. Pooled mean results showed that irrigation at 100 percent PE gave highest plant height at 50 DAS (73.42 cm) and harvest (116.79 cm), leaf area index at 50 DAS (3.31) and harvest (4.90), number of branches plant-1 (3.53) and chlorophyll content of leaves at 50 DAS (2.04). Irrigation level of 100 percent PE recorded highest NPK content (1.483, 0.222, 1.493 percent, respectively) and T.S.S. content (3.38 °Brix) but all these attributes were statistically at par with 80 percent PE. Results further showed that paired row sowing at 30 cm x 70 cm gave highest plant height at 50 DAS (68.43) and at harvest (111.9), leaf area index at 50 DAS (3.22) and harvest (4.26) and number of branches plant-1 (3.26) over normal sowing. Growth attributes and quality attributes were all highest in straw mulch, which were at par with plastic mulch.