I'd be less worried about the length of run to the inlet and more worried about the gutter spread. First question is who's parking in the parking lot. I've done work for industrial clients who didn't mind 50 feet or more of design spread in truck courts at distribution complexes, but that's clearly too much for a commercial shopping center where Grandma parks her Oldsmobile.
Typically I'll start with the municipal regs, see whether they have a requirement for spread in parking lots or just for roads. If it's parking lots, I'll follow it unless the number of inlets becomes overbearing and the client balks, in which case I'll put a half bay of spaces at the bottom of the hill and try to convince the municipality that the spread should "start" at the end of the spaces and only "count" in the drive aisles. They'll buy that sometimes, since the primary point of spread regs is to avoid hydroplaning. Phrase the request carefully.
If there's no reg for spread in parking lots, then I don't provide spread calcs to the municipality at all, but I *will* do a 100 year check of both the pipe system and of the inlets to make sure the HGL stays in the ground and the ponding doesn't top the curb and end up somewhere it's not supposed to, like skipping the detention pond and running onto a neighbor. Some municipalities in Georgia (Cobb, Forsyth, etc) require that you show this process on your plans somewhere, by showing the 100 year HGLs and the 100 year ponding at sag inlets, or showing overland 100 year flow relief on the plans. Don't forget to account for flow bypass of inlets on grade.
Some other areas of the country are even weirder. Durham NC requires you to run a 100 year overland flow analysis assuming every inlet on your site is clogged, and compare that overland flow depth to building FFEs. South Florida requires you to do a 100 year "no flow" analysis, where you dump the 100 year hurricane on your site, assume that the water can't go anywhere but up since every other adjacent site is flooded too, and compare the result to your FFE. The presumptions being A) everyone's evacuated and staying in hotels in Valdosta, and B) they want to check your 100 year site stage vs your neighbors and vs the FIRM, to ensure you're not pushing 100 year flood waters onto your neighbor.
Also, for rational flow for gutter spread make sure you're using an intensity (in/hr) from an IDF curve, not a rainfall depth (in) from an isohyetal map. Appendix A of the Blue Book gives a good table of Is if your municipality doesn't have one they want you to use.
Hydrology, Drainage Analysis, Flood Studies, and Complex Stormwater Litigation for Atlanta and the South East -