The effects of fire seasonality and prescribed burning on exotic species invasion are poorly understood in black greasewood (Sarcobatus vermiculatus) plant communities of North America. The impacts of reintroducing fire in the fall and spring on community composition and current-year biomass were evaluated at two such sites, one dominated by exotic annual C3 grasses in Miles City, Montana, USA, and one dominated by native perennial C4 grasses in Laramie, Wyoming, USA. Study sites were assessed based on existing Ecological Site Description (ESD) and State-and-Transition Models (STMs) and the Montana site was determined to be more degraded than the Wyoming site. Experimental design was a randomized complete block design with burns conducted in the fall of 2020 and spring of 2021. Exotic species such as Bromus arvensis were reduced by 56% in spring burned plots the following year and by 25% in the fall burned plots over the course of the study in Montana (58.3–43.5%) and Bromus tectorum did not increase in spring or fall burned plots in Wyoming. Accordingly, the proportion of native species in both plant communities remained constant and native perennial C4 grasses such as Sporobolus airoides were resilient to fire. Moreover, burn treatment had no negative effects on plant species richness, evenness, or diversity in either location. Fire treatments had variable effects on current-year biomass with variable influences of drought and season of burn. Prescribed fire, regardless of season, did not exacerbate exotic plant species spread or reduce native species dominance in either location – suggesting that phreatophytic S. vermiculatus rangelands near the eastern terminus of their range are resilient to anthropogenic burning. Future research should investigate the use of prescribed fire with other methods such as revegetation and herbicide application for reducing exotic plant dominance and increasing native plant species.