Let $p$ be a prime number, $K/\mathbf{Q}_p$ a finite extension, with integers $O_K$, valuation ideal $\mathfrak{p}$, and residue field $k_\mathfrak{p}$. Let $E$ be an elliptic curve over $K$ with good reduction $E_\mathfrak{p}$ over $k_\mathfrak{p}$.
If $\ell$ is a prime $\neq p$, then $T_\ell(E)$ is identified with $T_\ell(E_\mathfrak{p})$ in a natural way, by the good reduction of $E$. As it turns out such a Galois representation is determined, up to isomorphism, by the characteristic polynomial $f_{E_\mathfrak{p}}(x)=x^2-a_{E_\mathfrak{p}}x+|k_\mathfrak{p}|$ associated to $E_\mathfrak{p}$ and by $j_E$ mod $\mathfrak{p}=j_{E_\mathfrak{p}}$ UNLESS we are in the following (very) ${\it special}$ case:
$p\equiv 3$ mod $4$; $|k_\mathfrak{p}|=p^{2m+1}$; $a_{E_\mathfrak{p}}=0$; $\ell=2$; and $j_E\equiv 1728$ mod $\mathfrak{p}$.
If the first three conditions hold, then $E_\mathfrak{p}$ is supersingular and its endomorphisms ring over $k_\mathfrak{p}$ is "only" isomorphic to an order in $\mathbf{Q}(\sqrt{-p})$ containing $\sqrt{-p}$, and thus isomorphic to either $\mathbf{Z}[\sqrt{-p}]$ or to $\mathbf{Z}[(1+\sqrt{-p})/2]$. The second case occurs precisely when all the two torsion is defined over $k_\mathfrak{p}$, the first case when $E_\mathfrak{p}[2]$ has only two $k_\mathfrak{p}$-points. Both cases do arise and give rise to non-isomorphic $T_2(E_\mathfrak{p})$.
Essentially by Deuring's Lifting Lemma one can decide which of the two possibilities occurs by looking at the $j$-invariant of $E_\mathfrak{p}$ UNLESS this is equal to 1728. The point is that if $j_{E_\mathfrak{p}}\neq 1728$ then the two $k_\mathfrak{p}$-forms of $E_\mathfrak{p}\otimes_{k_\mathfrak{p}}\bar k_\mathfrak{p}$ lying in the $k_\mathfrak{p}$-isogeny class $a_{E_\mathfrak{p}}=0$ have the same ring of endomorphisms over $k_\mathfrak{p}$, out of the two possibilities listed above. The opposite being true when $j_{E_\mathfrak{p}}=1728$ (this fact is very related to the analysis of the mod $p$ reduction of Hilbert Class Polynomials associated to discriminants $-p$ and $-4p$ done by Gross and Elkies (cf. $\S 2$, Proposition, in Elkies' "The existence of infinitely many supersingular primes for every elliptic curve over $\mathbf{Q}$", Inventiones 89 (1987))).
In other words, in the special case the pair $(f_{E_{\mathfrak{p}}}(x), j_E$ mod $\mathfrak{p})$ does ${\it not}$ determine $T_2(E_\mathfrak{p})$.
Here is the question then: in the special case can we determine what is the endomorphism ring of $E_\mathfrak{p}$ (and hence $T_2(E)$) from congruences of $j_E$ mod a higher power of $\mathfrak{p}$ (or of $p$)?
It is not even clear to me whether this should be possible, let alone what power of $p$ we would need to tell one case from the other. The hope behind this is that the $j$-invariant of $E$ be "close" to that of the CM lift of $E_\mathfrak{p}$ and of its endomorphisms ring over $k_\mathfrak{p}$. Thanks.
PS: I do not know if the question above has anything to do with Is there a "classical" proof of this $j$-value congruence?
[EDIT: I realize that for clarity of exposition I should have probably recalled that $T_\ell(E_\mathfrak{p})$ for $\ell\neq p$, in the above notation, is a free ${\rm End}(E_\mathfrak{p})\otimes\mathbf{Z}_\ell$-module of rank one. Therefore, roughly, the knowledge of either of the two is equivalent to that of the other]