Over 100 feet away it's the law
when an emergency vehicle is answering a call, you must stay at least 500 ft. away from the vehicle.
You should park at least 20 feet away from a bus stop.
If you must park on the shoulder after a breakdown, try to move your vehicle as far off the roadway as possible to avoid blocking traffic. Turn on your hazard lights and, if safe to do so, place warning triangles or cones behind your vehicle to alert other drivers. Stay inside your vehicle and call for roadside assistance or emergency services.
Pull over off the road as far off and safely as possible right away until the emergency vehicles are well past you.
one car length for each ten miles/hour speed
Depends on the size of the fire. I will park as far away as I could.
You should turn your blinker on, move in to the next lane, and proceed with caution. If it is a one lane road, you should pass at a very low speed passing as far from the vehical as possible.
20ft
If your vehicle breaks down on the highway, you should move it as far off the road as possible, ideally to the shoulder or emergency lane. Turn on your hazard lights to alert other drivers and ensure your vehicle is visible. If you cannot move the vehicle, stay inside with your seatbelt fastened until help arrives for safety.
You can park as far away as you want. However you should never park closer than 10 feet.
Far enough that you could go around it without backing up, in case the one in front stalls or there is an emergency. It's difficult to put that in to a measurement of feet.
Your vehicle should be 15 feet from a train track.