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Seatsmart, a New York City-based search engine that is seeking to become the “Kayak” of ticket re-sellers, has closed on an undisclosed angel round, the founder and chief executive said Wednesday.

Kayak searches online travel sites to let users compare tickets of hotels, airline flights and car rentals. Seatsmart, meanwhile, performs the same function for ticket resale sites.

Larry Kokoszka, a former teach of English and Japanese in Tacoma, Washington, launched the site last spring in New York City’s East Village.

He said the funding round from one unnamed angel investor will help the site expand its menu of events, particularly among Broadway shows.

Seatsmart culls events from ticket marketplaces Razorgator, Ticketsnow, Rallytix.com, Ebay and Stubhub, which Ebay bought for $310 million in January.

Mr. Kokoszka estimates that with its current partners Seatsmart covers 80 percent of all the tickets available online.

The company gets a slice of the transaction from its partner sites and plans to add advertising to its revenue mix, he said.

The company faces competition, however, as two European ticket search engines, Tickex and Viagogo, launch services in the United States.

Mr. Kokoszka said Stubhub, which earlier this summer was named the official online ticket reseller for the 30 teams of Major League Baseball, has helped legitimize a business whose image was tarred by shady scalpers in the past.

“We have a lot to thank Stubhub for,” he said. “They guarantee ticket purchases to make sure fans aren’t going to be ripped off.”

Reflecting the industry’s changing face, in June Mike Domek, the founder of Ticketsnow, stepped aside to hand the chief executive’s job to Cheryl Rosner, former president of Hotels.com and Expedia Corporate Travel.

Though he has been “advised more than once” to move his company to California, Mr. Kokoszka said New York City is an attractive market because of its active theater-going culture and passionate sports fans.

“People here are very active,” he said. “They’re always going out to shows.”