We discuss the use of halogenated Si-X precursors, compared to the traditional silane precursor, to increase the growth rate of thick, high quality SiC homoepitaxial layers by chemical vapor deposition for power electronics applications. These precursors reduce gas phase nucleation and parasitic deposition to increase the availability of reactive Si-species at the SiC growth front due to their less reactive nature compared to silane. While less reactive Si-X species are expected to provide lower activity of Si-species at the growth front, the reduced parasitic deposition and precursor depletion from the gas delivery system leads to an effective increase in overall growth rate. This trade-off is explored in the context of parasitic deposition-induced particulate formation that degrades SiC epilayer morphology, while introducing structural defects. It is difficult to effectively compare different precursors used by various researchers, as there is no standard set of reported epilayer crystal quality parameters that takes into account various precursor/epilayer related benefits/tradeoffs. We propose a set of reactor-independent metrics that may enable realistic comparison across the various Si-X precursor chemistries. Results at the authors’ laboratory indicate that tetrafluorosilane precursor shows great promise in breaking the growth-rate/parasitic deposition trade-offs inherent in SiC growth, critical for widespread commercial adoption of SiC technology.