Increasing wildfire and declining snowpacks in mountain regions threaten water availability. We combine satellite-based fire detection with snow seasonality classifications to examine fire activity in California’s seasonal and ephemeral snow areas. We find a nearly tenfold increase in fire activity during 2020 and 2021 compared to 2001-2019 as measured by satellite data. Accumulation season snow albedo declined 17-77% in two burned sites as measured by in-situ data relative to un-burned conditions, with greater declines associated with increased soil burn severity. By enhancing snowpack susceptibility to melt, decreased snow albedo drove mid-winter melt during a multi-week midwinter dry spell in 2022. Despite similar meteorological conditions in 2013 and 2022, which we link to persistent high pressure weather regimes, minimal melt occurred in 2013. Post-fire differences are confirmed with satellite measurements. Our findings suggest larger areas of California’s snowpack will be increasingly impacted by the compounding effects of dry spells and wildfire.