The decision-maker drives a car along a straight highway towards his destination and looks for a parking place. When he finds a parking place, he can either park there and walk the distance to his destination or continue driving. Parking places are assumed to occur in accordance with a Poisson process along the highway. The decision-maker does not know the distance Y to his destination exactly in advance. Only an a priori distribution is assumed for Y and cases of typically important distribution are examined. When we take as loss the distance the decision-maker must walk and wish to minimize the expected loss, the optimal stopping rule and the minimum expected loss are obtained. In Section 3 a generalization to the cases of a non-homogeneous Poisson process and a renewal process is considered.