Colorado’s Snow Drought: What Less Snowpack Means for Colorado Homeowners
This winter, a lot of us have been looking at the foothills and Front Range skies thinking the same thing: where’s the snow? Colorado is in a statewide “snow drought,” driven by an unusually warm and dry start to winter.
From a homebuilding perspective, that matters more than most people realize. Snowpack is not just a ski-season issue. It is a slow-release water bank that helps fill rivers and reservoirs through spring and early summer. When that bank is underfunded, the ripple effects show up in wildfire risk, water planning, landscaping decisions, and even how we think about building and renovating homes in fire-prone areas.
We want to walk through what a snow drought can mean for homeowners in Colorado, and the practical steps that make the biggest difference if 2026 trends toward a hotter, drier, more fire-active season.
What “Snow Drought” Means in Plain English
Snow drought does not always mean there has been zero precipitation. It often means precipitation is falling as rain instead of snow, snow is melting earlier, or the total snow water equivalent (SWE) is far below what is typical for the date.
That’s exactly the concern being raised across the West this year. The federal drought portal reported that a large share of SNOTEL stations in Colorado are experiencing snow drought conditions, tied to warmth that limits mountain snow accumulation. And the USDA NRCS reported record-low snowpack observations across much of the state heading into 2026.
Per the Colorado Public Radio, major river basins were running well below normal for this time of year, and experts warn that poor snowpack years often precede Colorado’s worst fire seasons.
Why Snow Droughts Make for a Rough Fire Season
Wildfire behavior is influenced by many variables, but the basic chain is easy to understand:
- Less snow and earlier melt means landscapes dry out sooner.
- Dry fuels and warm weather can extend the window for significant fires.
- Wind-driven ember exposure is often what actually ignites homes, not a wall of flame.
That “earlier drying” pattern is part of why drought and low snowpack get so much attention in fire outlook conversations.
For homeowners, the key takeaway is this: if the broader environment is primed for fire, the details of your property and your home’s exterior become much more important.
What We Recommend
If you do only a few things, prioritize the actions below. They’re supported by wildfire science and are realistic for most homeowners.
1) Treat the first five feet like a “no-burn zone”
The immediate area around your home is one of the highest leverage places to reduce ember ignitions. The NFPA emphasizes preparing homes for ember exposure and reducing the likelihood of flames contacting the structure.
Practical moves:
- Replace wood mulch right next to the house with rock or noncombustible groundcover.
- Remove leaf litter and dead vegetation.
- Avoid storing combustible items against siding.
2) Make ember entry harder
The IBHS Wildfire Prepared Home guidance highlights vents, roofs, and gutters as common vulnerabilities, with recommendations like ember-resistant vents or fine metal mesh, among other minor renovations.
This is a big deal because embers can find tiny pathways into attics and crawlspaces, then ignite materials out of sight.
3) Reduce fuels in layers, not just one clearing
Defensible space is not only about hacking everything down. It is about spacing, maintenance, and reducing continuous fuels as you move away from the structure.
4) If you are renovating, “fire-hardening” upgrades can be built into the scope
If you already have a remodel planned, that is the perfect time to consider upgrades that are hard to justify as standalone projects later, like:
- More ignition-resistant exterior materials where appropriate
- Better venting protection
- Window and
door sealing improvements
- Deck detailing that reduces debris traps
Our Bottom Line for 2026
We can’t control snowpack, wind, or how hot July gets. But we can control how prepared a home is for ember exposure, how fuels are managed around the structure, and whether renovation dollars are spent in ways that reduce risk over the long term.
Snow drought years are a reminder to treat resilience as part of responsible homeownership, not as a panic purchase when smoke is already in the air. If you want a second set of eyes on a renovation plan or you’re thinking about building with wildfire resilience in mind, get in touch with us.











